PITTs:BURGH GAZETTE --PUBLISH= BY B. anma t DD...- - D. L E Ittresstra,ATON r n."'" .. , 11".t.1-313U11..GH,t /RIMY MORtiliti, FEB. 27, 4857 MIME -- do a e.V-Ply Volleyers =tom. parthia fp .4p r .., W KKK 1, y -Two D 61621 per ILOMIC.L. in &drone*. - ue. will ea eoppllsd on the following conditlanc 434. ro .... r , can he llinltted into • ett7l7.77r . here one en. fa at • • y Poet Mee. at an, time, by /Wading one do/lar. 443 7 .1grartee Foments ate strictly reelairwl, and IL. p.p. ttopped when the rear le ont.mareg literal:towed RATES OF ADVERTLIING. • . One walnere, (10 Dam of Not well or Amato.) DO ape ineertlon.. __..W......8 0 60 Do eseh arldltlOnal — tusertioh..-- 025 Do . cat week.-......-- —.. 176 Do Do three ws. 7 Do too an--.. ...... - ..... Do two mcarthe: - .--- 7 00 Do three months.- ------- 9 00 Dofonr montlas.-.-..--...__- 10' 00 Do twelve months-- pe r._,_,._ - 10 00 Manning Garde. (6 lioee or lee.) rannual 000 One dollar tor each ad4ltlonal Doe. One anixra, changeable at pleegnre.(per an. num.) oselosba of patler---. ..-- 20 00 Tea ltarr Taatriu—Wom..—The bill for the modification' of the Tariff, which palmed the House of Representatives on Friday, is simply an addition to the Free schedule of the existing dot of 1846; Oa and after the first day of Jo y, 1867, a very large number of actinic, now bearing duty will, if this bill- becomes a law, pan on to the free list. Some of three articles are each as follow to wifi—booke, maps, Charts, philosophical apparatus ani all other erVeles whatever imported for the nee of • the United Staten; statues. stationary, baste in marble, - bronze or 'alabaster, paintings, etehings, and whatever may be specially imported for the en oonragement of the fine arts; coffee and tea im ported direetlfretnikaie of growth; coins, cop per ore, cork-tree bark, dye-woods, garden seeds, oldglaes for remanufactura, gums, hair, raw. silk, raw hides, trees and shrtbs, and very many o ther art" toles, many of equal and many of minerimportance. The article which deserve° cepeolal, mention is wool, the provision for which to so follows : Sheep's Wool—manufactured of the value at the port of Importation of fifteen cents per pound or less, and of the value of fifty cents porpound or over,and hair of the alpaca, the goat, and other like salmis,' antaanufsetured free: Provided, That any wool, or hair of the alpaca, the goat, and other like animals, which shall be Imported in any other than the ordinary condition, us now and heretofore practiced, or which shall be changed in Its character for the purpose' of evading the duty, or wateh shall be cleansed or purified, or, assorted to se to raise Its value at the port of importation to fifty cents per pound or over, or which shall he reduced In value by the adthatore of dirt, or any foreigo substance, to fifteen matte per pound or less, shall ho sub. Piet to pay a duty of thirty per centum, any thing to this act to the contrary notwithotand log. The bip which passed the aJCI3O, of which tie above is a sketch, was introduced by Mr. Campbpl.l, of Ohio, and etanda as ho introduced it wl4 bat slight moditiostious. Aaregarde wool, We may say in general that We bill imposes no duty on any coating fifteen cents and under, and Gene on wool costtog fifty cents and over. Wool coating between fifteen and filly cents is left subject to 30 per cent, duty. The' amendment of Mr. Morrill, that Mr. . Campbell adopted, and which is incorporated in the bill, provides against fraud in importing wool, whieh haabeen praitioed by artificially de teriorstlng Xis value by rendering it poi, and in that ehape gettlit's it through the Costhen.liouse, but only to , be cieansed and 'thereby raised to a high valuation afterwards. Mr. Morriire amend meat looks to a prevention of this prootice. The Aram York Mara in its commercial review remark's that the practical effect, is expect ed to be the immediate extension of she Ameri can Woolen Mill., and all other factories to which free material and free drugs and dyes are likely to afford a decided advantage to compet ing with the foreign article, auto the farther effect will be to!ioduce caution ou the part of foreign manuftiourers and merchants engaged in tie Woolen trade in their shipments to this oonntry. The Clielreasu of the Ways and Means Committee calculates that the bill will redone the , resenati six of dollars direc ly — by the rate of ,dntyifin the raw materials, and four millions indirectly by Its cffsot upon the amount of the ImpOrtati4 of the manufactured articles which this encouragement to home competition will discoarage . tri. Eatia.—.4 is bat a . few weeks einoo by a blaring fire heaped high we eat an read or listerkd ro' another reading the wonderful ad veaturna so admirably and modestly ttild, of the great Arent) Explorer, Dr. Slane. Arad while "we read the wonder grew" how any human being with phAtical hecehAties and the as turil Ilabillly M:Offering from cold, thirst and hunger'could eerie safely through such labors, &ny l on and toilsi as that book records) : We re marked at the dui, that the seeder of foturedis, rise and death consequent upon such exposure sad aelf-dettial were probably sown in that lithe sad a'etive body. Sleeping in for bags un&i the open ski at a temperature of —5O; pluoged pttheliee-batit of the frozen . Item; tiring upon rats, tallow,, blubb'er and walrus-flesh ami in every rise imoriflei4 Me own, for the comfort and eafety of thoselrho looked to him se their friend and commander, it dote tetra all surprise as that;he has suaeliabed to the great conquer, or and that net and'quiet were not - Sufficient to compentutte for anoha terrible expenditure of tality as he was, sub, eot to in the winters be • tween the Arctic sdrole and the polo. He has gone the way of all .eeh at the early age of 84, too soon for the ostule of sot Once, too soap for his oormtry but in God'e own good time at whose flat whatsoever is coMeth to pass. The Philadelphia #orth Amadeu OaLlOhltili an eloquent article upon the illustrious dead with the remark that this countrymen, who had jot begun to luiow him well, and to cherish his name With patriotic : pride, had also begun to indulge in sanguine e4pectations of his future career; for his life eta far had been devoted to the moot daring and eminently Succeeded eaten • till* adventures; and it•wu but natural for all men to predict that heltrould fill the whole circle of life Leila had filledi;this brief segment. But the'aircle is incomplete. Death has auddenly removed lam to !auotiter orbit, and to other realms of (knowledge undiecovered coon- • try, when; wont:feta, &Ole; and, beauties stall open aped him, more than eye has 0000, or ear heard, or the' heart oogeeived. We sympathize with the bereaved eirolo op his home. We nat. wally mourn the parly: death of one eo brie; so noble, on gentles eo iiodest, se endowed with 'all the good qualities f,of the heart to twine Ironed the loftier , 4.4 stronger growth of a high and commanding +lnd. We look upon his death ass lose of one or the chief ornaments of biz country—one of the moat distinguished In that train of eoienoe whin are now making, , ste it were, a new earth.( /hit he is not wholly dead.. He has built himself 4 monument that shall bearktis name down tot distant ages. He lives In that noble and beautiful work—that grand epic of adventures 'amid !the polar snows—which Ms !aspired band Wrote! out. He lives in the great diloovery he, made of the open Arctic sea. He lives in the mlirvelloos and undying record of his whole, earthly .career. He lives, to, In a better and immortal life." Bt loam? or lisvelitht Cortatieszoxise.—We have epaee for only the get qf the business done in the sessions of the #oard at Harriaburg. The resolution which wast referred inet week to a elect : Committee catnegip on Wednesday for reconsideration. it , wee passed open in: divi sions, and the first art,!, that the tax for the ,filuate should net exceed . tkat of 1866, was disa greed to. So was the seciand part toadies the 1 peals of taxation. The Wed division express tog the confidence L of the poen' that under its power to equalise, it nap reduce,- as cell no 'raise theyelnition rtiurced by the Cover* coun ties of the State, was: spied to.' 4 resolution . Secoommentbag the Legielature to reduce the rate of taxation on Xs id keep "the, aggregate, amount of State taxei , wit* the tunCttot weirs. ed for the yeas,lB66 tree e4pted. :After some further bounds of We (*portal:me the board adjourned Its then preh9t tessiou. OK 'FABLE. Kni: ova Idomt# 111.11 iiklragt An eutertiihgog boolf, !kph carrio its mom. mendstionin lte tidal f Fiqiictehld !‘ copy' (rum theP4bAlberl4i4Baraeir:&:"Co.,New York Mi. Galizsr.,l:—The locofoco press, headed by the "plain-dealing Gray," p. M. atClevelead by the will of that celebrated gentleman from Rome, Mr. Ottepbelt, P. M. Genera, and his master, Mr. :Pierce of Concord, * hat undertaken the 18th laber of Hercules. The labor, bow ever, may be said to be divided into two portions and meted out to separate hands for perform anee. Thy Lora are certain political harpies in the venal bands of the present pretorian pro slavery guard, which delight to gorge on the reputations of their opponents. Like the tlythio Harpies of the olasslo poets, if.they can per chow, find nothing to fill their ravenous maws they leave behind them an odor eo fetid as to warn off all after -Comers even if these latter 'approach with intent hostile to the plundering intruders. The "Democracy" at Tresent, are provided with all the implements of warfare. TheFrenth it will tie remembered plied the defenders of BeJ bantopol with certain bomb-shells called eamou itets which were fatal to a man as soon as he caught a emell of them. The pro slavery party has opened the discharge of coatouflets upon Mr. Greeley. Thin is for one detachment. But there is a eocond labor as we have shove intimated. Mr. Greeley is only a man, a private oititen' by himself, bbt the organ of which Le is chief, The New York Tribune, that is a power In this republic. It finds tie way into every village and hariVet in the great sisterhood of Free litotes, passes beyond Mason and Dixon's lies, is known even in some of those bread wastes which slavery haadentded, and is cursed in mod cables and hovele whose occupants this "dam of villainies" is fast dragging back to a State of semi-barbariem. It Is the organ through whloh the best Weal of America speaks to the Masses; it is the brief chronicler of the times and keeps those millions of our realtog and thinking &Stens up In all that passes in the great worlds of matten and mind. This great Arahimedean lever mutt be thrown from its ful• crow, or it will in time upset the whole eupor structure of fal,thooi 'called 'national Demoo• racy.." A very general scheme seems to be laid in ports of Onto to dieoriminate against the Tribune in the Poet Officials, and to refuse to do liver.it to subscribers on the slightest' pretexts which may be tortured to cover the omission . Weil, we have only to say that they have under taken a Tory cousiderable job. But as regards the charge of lobbying sod bribery which an attempt is making to fasten upon Mr. Greeley, and which political Thugs are . enddting and fostering to his Injury, we be• liege it to be the basest of fabrications, the meet wicked and false of schemes to blast a repel% tion that statute in the way of the party Jugger naut. Where darkness prevails in the minds of the people, however, It will pass Into the cur rent jargon of political backs and be a hobby for the "demagogue of a thousand clumps" for the text generation. Deny lit What is the use denying? the editor who would print or the orator who would utter it pretending to believe It true, wilt nenr hint at Its refutation even ii - made on ground as strong as proof of Holy writ.- The people who now utter the shib boleths and pronounce the well-donesof Demoo racy are given over to blindness of mind. Gen eral enlightenment and the eleiation of the standard of political morality In the nation is oar only hope. Mr. Greeley has been guilty of doing a very foolish, what he would probably call a very "green" . thing. Re took upon himself the office of a carrier between Washington and New York, and that is 0000011 for those who desire to ruin a man's character. Mr. Greeley glees hie whole connection with the Dee Moines Improvemetl Company in the following paragraphs : Bat I am oonfideat no one has testified that I was paid $l,OOO, one dollar, one oent, or any other nom, either for my own aervioee as an agent before Contrast', or to , enable me to retain sty one else in that capacity, simply because such testimony would be false. Mr. John fifty. ker is said to have testified that he paid toe $lOOO for time purpose; and In feet, just as I was leaving Washington for the !ant time, I was in trusted by Mr. Stryker with adrift for that num on the Measurer of his company in New Fork, which draft I understood was to meet one of like amount which would soots he drawn on me by an agent employed to look after the interests of the company in the anticipated absence of Mr. Stry- ker on s western jimmy. Accordingly, / did receive in New York notate of boob adrift on Int acme three or four weeks thereafter, and, after consulting the treasurer of the company, I so rived the draft on me and paid it with the pro reeds of Mr. Stryker's draft, which up to that moment remained in my pocket book napes rented, mid of coarse uoaccepted. I would here Fire the name of the drawer of this draft on me: but as be to certainly not a member of Congress, and has already been before the Investigating. Committee, and doubtless toldthe whole story, P forbear. Had I really been a lobby agent of this Dee Moines Company,. and at:taloa to conceal that Inez, my name would of course hare never greet. ed the public in connection with said company's affairs; but, as I never wee hired by said eompa puny, never paid our promised, nor offered any thing by it, and never had aishadow of interest in Ito property in any way, .except that I knew -one or two valued friends were among its stool ' holdere, I find my name bruited all over the country as one of, its hirelings, and there are probably come men so stupid or so malloions as actually to believe the 'slander. Well, let them. THCATT W/113 histxtco —Rumors of an import ant treat concluded ;with Shako have toned their way into the public: prints and are exciting some attention. It is said that by Ito provisions a large Aare of lietrican territory, embracing Ike whole of MC_ Sidle of Sonora, is to be ceded to the United Stoles, lot' the sow of $16,000,000—$8„. 000,000 to go towards the payment of * Maxie= claims. Certain cohceseions In favor of Ameri can oommeree are ato embraced In the treaty, The Journal of &stamens nays there "Is prob ably some basis for these rumors, for a private letter from Mr. Foreyth (our Minister to Mexico) himself, to a gentlenian here, Mates that he wee about to close an important treaty—not naming the object. •• Tile preierit Admibietrition had Intended and hoi.ed erne zu , ri mist aittifootory man ner every peodiug quehtiou with, any foreign country before the close of this term, and they may yet Consummate this end in regard to diox in.. A treaty of the kind ab,ve mentioned might get the required - two-thirds in the preeent Sen ate, bri/ if it ehonid not pans the body as now vl 5 omit ted and]ehould lie over to the X.X.X.Vitt Congo , it will receive its quistne, unless the Wilmot proviso be annexed, ' The Republican party is becoming a power in the Senate now. It will count Ito twenty Seniors in the coming Congreee, and op a test question like the admit!• sidn of new territory at the South, we may count upon Allen, of-1f- I , nominally a Democrat, to vote with the party of freedom. The Looofocos cannot in a full Senate bring their forty-two members to the match an the annexation of new slave- toil. Tan New Catuarr.—Taking it for granted that the names poilLahed in oar columns yes terday morning are- those of the gentlemen (Theisen by Mr. Buchanan for his Cabinet officers, it will sot be necessary for no to say mod about them. They, with perhaps one exception, are well known throughout the republic. Messrs. CPS and Tonne, have long been noted for their willing enbeerviency to the slave-power; Mr. Cobb, of Georgia, Is one of the more moderate of the States' Bights men of the South; Mr. Thompson, of Mississippi, Mr. Floyd, of Vir ginia, and Mr. Brown, of Tenneseee, are con. semattve fire-eaters. The place of P. M. Gen eral is supposed to be filled by Mr. Alexander of New Jersey. This gentleman belongs to one of the unit respectable ' , theological" families in that State. His father, Dr. Alexander, wasefor . a long time President Of the Theological Semi. nary at Princeton, his brother is a professor in that institution now, and , another brother. James, in one of the :mitt eloquent divines In the Stole of New York. The one to whom it is said the i'vrt Office departmeet le to be given has for a long time been 'leader in his party in New Jersey. Ile wan the candidate of the Bra chanecre for Governor of New Jersey last fill, and, although , 'Brick" carried the State, Mr. A. Wan defeated by a union of the Americans and Republicans on Air. Newell, the present Govern. or. Ibis this mishap, prohably, which has corn. mended him to the favor of the President elect. JUDO' foromove, thei SIMMS Barone, kw; written i letter to Caleb Curbing fall of virtuous ludigoatlott at the prospect of hie removal from the bench he has en "Monza" _ ISTATI LIDILILUE.—Rey. Dewitt's appointment to this of6oe has been confltened by the Senate by the following Vote: Yeas-,-Breirer, Browne, Crewmen, Ely, Evans, .Fetter, Finney, Flannikin, Glum, Harris, Ingrain, Joidan, Knox, Lenbacb, Laub, Penrose, Sellers, Steele, Straub, Walsh, Wilkins, Wr igbh Nays—Coffey, Frazer, Ringer, ?dyer, Soo field, Shuman, Souther, Taggart; 8. The offtee.belonged to the Republicans sod to a Republican it ought to have been given. Mr. Soother in hie rematke in the Senate relative to this appointmentand in answer to Dr. Oakum, expressed what we believe to be the correct view, "that it is the true policy and the deity of the Republican party to take care of its friends,' in ail oases where it is right and proper. • Da. Ilesa's relics will be conveyed over the Baltimore and Ohio 1341 way to Balthuors, and thence to. Philadelphia. It looks very mOch like neglect in the Pennsylvania Railway that it did not claim the honor of conveying across the soil. of this State all that remains of one of her moat distinguished sone. Bat the Baltimore people stepped forward and plucked the honor, while others were "waiting for something to tarn up." ?RIMMED—OR Th=Ws/. Feb. 20th, by Elder L Miuer Ms. %NOB D ACON, of Due* Ohio, to Hiss ELIZABETH FORRESTER. of Alleghes y City. DIIID—On Thursday, February Rath, at the midden', of her husband, Gonne°, N. 1, BAltAllortfo of Whit= J. Hallowell. in the Tlst., year of her age. PEAII AL N o cEs Farmers, Read Carefully. • l'uus.memr.Atbong Oa. Ohio. 8ept.6.18.54 Gream.m—llorowl la I mind you • mvtlitt , la• t from some of my eastomme. I could eon] u 00. Palling of the b.:elite derived from be um of your B e here's U cod Blmere, but Ell molt Ewell , oPPertuo tr. I cm It le my G- ly ltd Mai It very nee oh 1 feat I: le beaming popular Irberever bird a. jl. innxiEN. I have been effected for sometime with headache. I es O *M/init. gene at deb! Ity ne ereakrien all over. Ulla own +ord.] to mull el that I mold not wet over try field. or term wl bout sitting down to %eat tire r Unice bet re I got tao: to the bowel. Blinn anriaed ii• liTi.e:eg..g.rgr-..d nr/FlLBTlVitilfti 111 fel!. greetnea . better, end neaten / had used Ilia one bottle I thought It had done me roe hundred dollar worth of good. I gest =loth., bottle and ban not used more then b •Ig-cf it and Can eat aff J as. ote bold of and aun.do a prood itott's work My wife tams also been athlete.] wit headache. Elbe oat of the tams two bottles mod the nas ro• s Foal appetite and I. much !mirrored in healtn. 8111 Mile WOODRUM ~'9old at ai per bottle, or eft bottle! tbr 11, by the Froppetare. 1,10 . 524 :1, _/t 00., r Idanurectur 11?rUggiste generaili. Mahn Kennedy's Medical Diseove'ry' —lf ever an ortlee rmaired Its right nom., this has eartahtly keen leratimatelY chrietened, for It has been a dimovery to medleine that has performed mere cures than any other article on record. You citanot mention the name of Hag int Discovery. dither in the matting room or the wan, hoagie—the store of the trades:mut or the shop of the rorehoolc—the nthrLster's Andy or obe mime. saludym ..at the Merchant. Zvi:lenge at twe e or the mechanic's resort at one—ln the parlor or the kitchen—but what tome are reedy to smith out what It tout done fig them In the cure clones dreadful humor. We would ray to the •Mlcted, Wien. mld be healed. Bold by Dr. 01U. H. ligYligH, ILO Wood strut whole saI f. e 2 mt; T JA.RISS I'. 11431.1N0. AINEhm7. 10 gross Ayer's Cherry Pectoral fur rots at D. 1 1 / 1 1'81E101. 140 Wood .1 (.21 600 doz licLahe'sls for sale at K ay oce..l4o wood st for S gro.. Roney Soap—Oh:meg, UMW/ ill 1.044.4 (0.441• 1114 4.1 KEYSER.% 140 {Pay 44. 4427 300 canees 140 Wood 4t, fait 100 doz. isoerravo's Batters for I ale at KSTPER.T.IIO Wood E. 1 he Thousands whose aonstitutionshave b.. ruined, and their eysteme pawned b 7 thaDuld or hiere‘u7, should al.e the ibllonint their earnest shah• Dr. OILS.. Newton Eamiltom P. lear.lB3l, mid,' I bay. need. myself half • down ,hottlas or Boehmld'a Gar Man Bitten fn. LIT, Complaint and dim... of • ear. ono ehataoter, min:Ming Dona the ma of Marearr f lima polmnad ar.d altheted with arenas VIM{ Mop MO or th la latt.r article The Garman bllttsra I. the Drat o,fm ahlrb I obtalttod .ny miler L.l have also CT.. 11 • lam to man oymaptles. wit e tha mat salutary malt I think a• many mom bottles rum roc Hold, trboterale d naafi, at Dr. OW, If. BiIYHNR'H Drag arra, lad w ood at. ken of the Ooldan Mo rt ar. aryartlammnt hrttrardikall - /4'"lopl3r. A CURS FOR SCROFULA, 1 tiIIORS, CANORIDS tiN U ICY T p RF E LIVIt CIPLAINT. itIII E M TIS3.BYNUM., N:ILA.EiITRE. AND BLADDUL W T I% RGO IW Si/FELLING. The ibllowLeg *Aisle Is frsm the pen °lone