hi !l TWO DOLLARS PER ANNUM,? HALF-YEARLY IN ADVANCE. 5 AND FARMERS' AND EGHANIGS1 QEGISTER. vir NOT PAID WITHIN THE TEAR, i $2 50 WILL BE CHARGED. 9 I I -Sk. Saib VlU J4"P J :.IL " . f 'fit 1 E t ffv aa . . , - - : : 1 ; : 7 ; : ; ' ' . PRINTED AND PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY JONATHAN ROWv SOMERSET, SOMERSET COUNTY, PA. tfew Series. TUBSDA1T, JANUARS' 26, 1847, Vol- 5.-No. 12- TIIE SOMERSET HERALD. TUESDAY, JANUARY 2G, 1847. NEW COUNTERFEITS. j Counterfeit 5's and 10's on the Bank of Chambersburgh are in circulation. They read "The Chambersburgh Bank." j Also 10's on the State Bank of India- ; lia vignette, an Indian looking at a tram of cars. OUR MOUNTAIN BOYS. "We are gratified to learn that the young men of our borough and neighborhood are about raising a company to go to Mex- ico, in case there should be an other re quisiiion for Volunteers. A number hare already enrolled themselves. This is a praiseworthy move, and wc hope there will be no holding back. It matters not now how the war originated or who is responsible for it; the national honor is involved in the issue, and every effort of the Government ought to be exerted to secure an early and honorable peace. It is therefore the duty of all to stand by the country and to aid, in whatever way they best can, the constituted authorities. In case our "Frosty Sons of Thunder" jet an opportunity to fight the Mexicans, we venture to predict they will "do it up brown," for they know how to use the shooting irons and their appendages, and would walk into a regiment of rancheros like "tea thousand bricks." i -v- THE WAR. The prospect for a speedy termination of the war is anything but encouraging. The Mexicans are evidently determined to hold out as long as they can, and our present forces are hardly sufficient to bring bring them to their senses and to terms, A great error, it seems to us, has been committed in invading Mexico with so small a force, and the Government ought to lose no time in sending on ample reinforcements. The ten regiments which are to be enlisted for the regular array cannot be raised and got into service short of six months, if even then, and the gov ernment's chief reliance must therefore be, for the present, upon volunteers. By increasing the pay of these to 10 or 12 dollars per month and securing to each a section of good land, a force sufficient to "conquer a peace" could be raised in a very short time; and the public moneys could not be more advantageously applied, nor could a more jrsT disposition ever be made of the public lands. NATIONAL FINANCE. C7For the foltowing synopsis we are indebted to the Pittsburgh Gazette. We find some interesting facts in rela tion to the National Finances, developed by the Washington correspondent of the Baltimore American. They slate that the appropriation bills reported in the House last Saturday, from the Committee of Ways and Means amount, in the aggre gate, to nearly forty millions of dollars; and it is supposed that thoae which are to follow will well the amount to fifty-five or sixty millions. The amount of the Army bill is $23,- 533,704,25. Of this sum there is for the pay and subsistence of officers and men; ! transportation of troops; purchase'of hor ses, mules, fcc; ordnance and ordnance stores; manufacture of arms, &c; for the arxy proper, $6,813,373,25; for the pay, subsistence, ordnance, transportation and supplies, for the volunteers, $17, 932,331; and to supply deficiencies in the existing appropriations for the pay, travelling allowance, transportation and supplies of volunteers, under the act of 30th May, and joint resolution of 8lh August, $4,793,000. The amount of the Navy bill is $S, P20,204,49, of which $2,500,000 is for the increase and repairs of vessels; $469, 417 for improvements of Navy Yards; $275,000 for the Dry Dock at Brooklyn; and $320,546 for the support of the Ma rine Corps. The amount of Indian appropriations is $1,1791321, of which $124,000 is for fulfilling the recent treaty with the Chcro kecs, and $1 10,000 for that with die Pot towatamies. They also state that the monthly state ment of the Treasury Department was only furnished by the Department en Thursday evening, after the adoplion of ,i i "i - - , th 1 lutKuvs eulhng for the statement. The b,W:e of $2,917,162, in the Trea - sury on the 31st of December show a falling off of $1,937,67. The Govern ment hav e received as a balance of the last loan $1,539,000, and the receipts into the- Treasury it is supposed were nearly two millions of dollars durimr the month ma- kin? a tolal eipentljture of $5,476,547,07 d,Jrin the monlh of December. The ex- ; pciuitures will be equal to this sum, it is thought, in January. STATE FINANCES. The following facts we glean from the State Treasurer's Report. fi- , VMr ,m " ntA, tn M.59 . I nit w The balance in the Treasury, on the 1st Nov. 1845 was $334,886. Total revenue last year,$3,9 13.943. Expenditures for the same period a mounted to $3,529,264. Making the balance in the Treasury, 30th Nov. last, $3S 4,678. The State Treasurer estimates the rev enue for the present fiscal year at $4,026 178, and the expenditures at 3,447,058; leaving a surplus on the 30th November of $579,000. The public debt amounts to $40,739,- J4 4 The receipts from the public improve ments daring the year amounted to $1, 357.203. The expenditures on the public works during the year, $732,067. Balance over expenditures,$625,136. The Treasurer thinks the February in terest will be paid. From the National InlcWgencer. . At the present moment, the following letter, received by the mail of yesterday, cannot foil to be of the deepest interest to every class of our readers: TO THE EDITORS. Santa Anna will not march on Saltillo, but will make a feint to create such im pression. Should the Army under General Tay lor be concentrated in that neighborhood, Santa Anna, with his whole force, will rush on Tampico; and, if he accomplishes the reduction of that place, he will pro ceed along the coast to the Rio Grande, and, with an overwhelming force between Matamoras and Point Isabel, cut off the supplies to our army. With some knowledge of the character of Santa Anna, and the topography of the country, combined with the recent news, I have arrived at the above conclu sion. The subject being one of great impor tance and interest just now, is the reason I trouble you with the perusal, and re quest the publication of this short letter. Very respesctfully, ' A NAVAL OFFICER, Annapolis, Jan. 13, 1847. "Aid and Comfori." A Whig member of the Illinois Legis lature, conceiving it to be his duty to "aid and comfort" the locofocos, particu larly in their present dilemma, recenUy introduced the following resolutions into that body. JtetohcU by the General Assembly of the State of Illinois, That we heartily ap prove of the message of the Hon. James K. Polk, President of the United Slates, vetoing the bill passed at the last session of Congress of the United States, making ' r .1 . r JPPropruuww r me improvement o ivivers auu uarours. Renolc til further. That the course of the President of the United States in com promising the line of boundary on the forty ninth degree, after asserting that our title up to fifty-four degrees and . forty minutes was "clear and unquestionable," meets the entire approbation of the General Assembly of the Stale "of Illi nois." This applause of two of the main acts of Mr. Polk's administration, operated like a fire-brand thrown into the midst of the "faithful;" they immediately adjourn ed, and at the next meeting, laid them on the table! Does this look like backin Mr. Polk! N. P. Willis says: It was in the church of St. Nicholas that I firat became aware of a very sensible German custom that of concentrating the cough' and nose blowing during service time. The clergyman stops at diflcrent periods of his discourse, steps back from the pulpit stand, and blows his nose the entire con gregation imitating his example, and dis turbing the service with the operation at no other time. The Washington Fountain notices a report that Col. Bornford's bi? run is to h brought to bear upon the Castle of Saa Jufa de,Un that the shells arc all ; cast and ready for it, and that it has been shi , to lUc lln Z ' Vera Cruz. LAST GATHERING. Ocean and earth restore AH that your arras entomb From every distant shore Come to the gathering come! Sages of days gone by Long mouldering in the tomb . Haste to the realms on high ' . ,. i Come to the gathering come! Warrior with laurel brow Who fixed a nations doom, j Come to the judgment now, - Come to the gathering come! j Bright was thy dark eyes gleam, I Fair was thy cheek of bloom; Again those cL arras shall beam; Come to the gathering come! Mourner with tearful eye, Come to hy spirit home. Thy peaceful rest on high, Come to the gathering come! Loved one of days gone by Haste from the graves cold gloom Again we meet on high, Come to the gathering eome! Ocean and earth restore, All that your arms entomb, Myriads from every shore, Come to the gathering come! From the Nat. Intelligencer THE CRISIS. "When the present Administration came into power, the country was eminently prosperous. WTe had a Tariff which protected our own labor against the pau per labor of Europe. All the greaten terprises of the country were in success ful operation. Real estate was gradually advancing in value, and the products of labor met with a ready sale. . The money-market was steady, and credit rested on a solid basis. There was a general confidence felt and expressed in the .state of things which existed. All this was attributable to the wise measures adopted by tho Whig part)-, which came into power with the Harrison Administration. But this fair scene, which cheered the hearts and enlivened the hopes of this great people, was doomed 1o a sudden re verse. The Baliiniore Convention, with its baleful influence, met, and, assuming to act for the people, without their in structions and against their interests, vir tually elected the present Chief Magis trate: a citizen who did not himself as pire to the office, and who, without the influence of the nomination, could scarce ly hare received the vote of any county in the Union. But this usurpation of the popular rights by the Convention did not stop here. The same body decreed that the whole of Oregon was ours; that Tex as should be annexed; that the Tariff of 1842 should be overthrown; and that the Subtrcasury should be established. Never did a body of men in so short a time entail upon their country a system of measures so calamitous. And, when we consider the elements of which that Convention was composed some of its members being irresponsible, others self appointed, and many of those who had a show of authority receiving it in disre gard of popular rights and of the princi ples which they professed to hold sacred it is amazing with what tame submis sion a submission that augured unfavor ably for the cause of free government the decrees of this body were received. The rights of the People were not on ly usurped by imposing upon them a Chief Magistrate, but the Convention bound in party fetters this instrument of its creation, and the. National Legislature. True to the behests of that body, Mr. Pols, in assuming his duties, expressed a determination to carry out to . the letter its decrees. The Oregon controversy brought us to the verge of a war with England, from which we were saved by the wisdom and firmness of the Senate. But Texas was annexed, the Tariff was overthrown, and the Subtrcasury enacted. And we are now realizing the fatal conse quences of these measures. We have had a war of about eight months with Mexico. Two brilliant vic tories in the field against superior num bers, and the capture of a city, strongly fortified and defended by a force much greater than ours, have added to the re nown of our arms. Wre claim a nominal possession over a great extent of country, through which General Kearney has marched, and which Captain Stocktox has surveyed from his quarter-deck; but we only hold by a forcible tenure that which has been subjugated by General Taylor. And, to maintain this posses sion, our little army is necessarily divided and placed in garrisons remote from each other, liable to the attack of the enemy, and difficult to be defended., This is the bright side of the picture. Lei as turn to that of a darker shade. The people with "whom ".'wc are at war arc greatly exasperated, and their discor dant elements have, in a great degree, be- - come united. Their most lavorea ana j experienced captain, by the permission of the President of the 'United States, has j returned from his banishment, and now leads its arm v. Several thousands of our brave citizens have fallen victims of this war, whose graves are on the battle-fields of the 8th and 9th of May, at Point Isa bel, Monterey, on the shores of the Rio Grande, or on the line of their return homeward: and it is impossible to say how many now bear within them the seeds of fatal diseases in the army, at home, or on their way thither. The Administration seem to have been as ignorant of the Mexican character as they have shown themselves to be of their own powers and of the great duties which devolve upon them. They evidently be lieved that a military array on the Rio Grande would alarm the Mexican Go vernment and induce it to avoid a conflict, by a large cession of territory; and that this would glorify the Administration, and give great strength to its party. But, if this threatening attitude of our army should fail to intimidate, it was certain that a collision would take place, which would afford an occasion for our troops to sweep over the country, and, in the course of a few months, to "revel in the halls of the Montezumas." And then all Mexico would be annexed, or at least the terms of peace would be dictated by the Admin istration. In thus claiming, under their own measurement, compensation for past delinquencies, and indemnity for the ex penses of the war, a rich harvest of glory was anticipated. Whatever may be said on the subject, we are satisfied that some such visions as these floated in the minds of the President and his Cabinet. But they have experienced a sad re verse in their hopes. The death-scene has broken upon them. It is said that more men have fallen in this unfortunate and unnecessary war than fell in the late war with England: a war which involved our rights as a nation, and in which we exhibited a prowess and acquired a mili tary fame, on the land and on the water, that astonished the world. But an eight months' war has not only proved fatal to many thousands of our ci tizens, but it has brought our Treasury to the verge of bankruptcy. The Sub treasury hangs like an incubus upon the moneyed action of the country. The Tariff of 1810 will greatly diminish the revenue, and vet the friends of the Ad ministration shrink from a vote for duties which the Secretary of the Treasury de clares to be necessary to enable him to obtain any further loans. Can the Administration, under the cir cumstances, ask the Whigs to impose taxes which have been refused by the friends of the war? Common decency would prevent this. The Whigs will, no doubt, appropriate all the means for the prosecution of the war which the Admin istration may ask, and which shall be rea sonable. But, as the Whig system of fi nance has been repudiated by the Admin istration, and as they have imposed upon the country the Subireasury, it is but just that they should carry out their system of finance, which their decided majorities in both Houses will enable them to do. As this state of things was brought about by a series of measures which has been steadily and zealously opposed by the Whigs, they arc not answerable for the consequences. If the co-operation of the Whigs is de sired, let the Administration repeal the Subtrcasury and re-enact the Tariff of 1842 let them undo so much as is in their power of the mischief which they have perpetrated and we hazard nothing in saying that the Whigs will not shrink from the imposition of any taxes which the exigencies of the country shall re quire. But they do not believe that the credit of the Government can be sustained whilst that miserable contrivance of a Subtrcasury remains in force. There is not a man in the nation, we believe, who has any adequate knowledge of finance, that does not concur with them in this be lief. The futile attempt to identify the posi tion of the Whigs with that of the Oppo sition to the late war with England will not be countenanced by any one who has a proper regard for his own character. Such a work must be left to the lowest political drivellers those who fetch and carry to order, and who arc only tolerated because they are useful. Whether we regard their patriotism, their intelligence, or their character, the Whigs constitute an association of men unsurpassed in the history of any coun try. They conscientiously believe that, whilst the present Administration was brought into power under the forms of the Constitution, a serious and possibly a fatal blow was given to the principles which lie at the foundation of our Go vernment; and they as sincerely believe that this Mexican War was commenced by a gross usurpation of the Executive, for admit as we have said more than once before, and which cannot be too strongly impressed upon the public mind admit that there was cause of war, Congress, and Congress only, could de clare it. Notwithstanding which con eideraticuv wc believe, and indeed -we know, that the Whigs, under every dis couragement, will stand up for their coun try, and, so far as they can sustain its , honor. But the Administration asks loo much when it calls upon the Whigs to surrender their discretion, their knowledge atiu iAiiiivviii mantis ui liuauic, j those who have shown themselves to be i ignorant of its first principles. Very late from the Gulfof Mexico. The U. S. steam frigate JHstiuippi, IL A. Adams, commander, arrived at Nor folk on Wednesday morning, having on board Com. M. C. Perry. She left Anton Lizardo on the 29th December, and touched at Ilavanna for coal and wa ter." Com. Perry arrived in this city yes terday, accompanied by Lieut. Contee, also of the Mississippi, to whom we are indebted for the following information, and for Ilavanna papers: "On the 20th December, Com Perry, with the Mississippi, Vixen, Bouita, and Petrel, took possession of Laguna and destroyed the guns and munitions of war found in the forts and town. Comman der Sands, with the Vixen and Petrel, was left in charge of the place, and the Bonita was left to assist in holding Fron tera and the mouth of Tabasco river. Off Alvarado, the Mississppi captured a Mex ican schooner, the Amalio, and sent her to New Orleans for adjudication. "The Mississippi came home for some necessary repairs to her machinery. As soon as these can be completed, she will return to the Gulf of Mexico, ready to assist in any operation which may be contemplated against the enemy. "Purser A. D. Crosby, of the Missis sippi, was killed by falling from aloft on board the Vixen, which vessel he was as sisting to pilot over the bar at Laguna, on the occasion of the attack on that place. From Havana papers of the 7th of this month we learn that on the 23d of December was published at Mexico a de cree of the Constituent Cougress decla ring Gen. Antonia Lopez de Santa Anna to be the Provincial President of the Re public, and of Valentin Gomaz Farias to be Provincial Vice President of the Re public. In consequence of the absence of the President, and in urcoi iLuice wiih a decree of the Congress, the Vies Presi dent had assumed the duties of Acting j President, and taken the oath of office. i The Government had recognised as A gent of Great Britain at San Luis de Po tosi during the war with the United States, Senor Juan Davies. Gen. Don Valentin Canalizo had been appointed Minister of War and Marine of Mexico. The subjoined paragraph, the only one of any consequence besides those which state the above facts, would seem to au thorize an apprehension that the reported advance of Santa Anna with a large army towards Saltillo was in reality a move ment towards Tampico, were it not that we have ourselves received letters from Tampico of as late date as the 23d of December, when every tiling was quiet; which could hardly have been the case had the movement of the body of 5.000 men been in the direction staled in the following paragraph: From the Vera Cruz Loeomofer ef the lilh. "We learn by the express of last night that a division, consisting of 5,000 men of all arms, moved from San Luis m the direction of Tula, with a view to inter cept the passage of the enemy who will march their forces by this route in order to place themselves in communication with Tampico. Xaf. Int. The Sub-Treasury. The New York Tribune says: "The Sub-Treasurer here begins to see the Elephant, and finds it impossible to get through with the receipt and disburse ment of specie even by working after night fall. A small lot of silver coin, $300, was sent Sn at 1 o'clock, and at 3 o'clock was handed back to ihe depositor, as the gentleman from Schoharie would neither count nor receive it without coun ting. Great inconvenience is occasioned to those who have sums to pay in by the rennirement of the Treasurer, that thev must rome and see the coin counted. A great loss of time occurs in this way." The journal of Commerce says that the Sub-Treasury, so fir as it hears, is not much besides an objeet of contempt, and that the government itself i3 the chief sufferer by it; and letters from Washing ton state that the Government will soon resort to the issue of Treasury Notes to a large amount, and some as low as 610. This, be it remembered, is the anti bank hard money administration! FEDERAL RELATIONS. A member of the Iowa Legislature was highly indignant at the Speaker of the House, when he announced him a mem ber of the commulee on "Federal Rela tions." He considered it a rank biting in sult. "Look here, Mr. Speaker," said he, "none of vour tricks upon travellers.--You needn't think that, because I am a new member, you can run your rigs upon me. I am not as green as you suppose. Go to thunder with your federal relations! I han'nt one of them in the world and wouldn't own hiin il I had." OFFICIAL. TOX THS WASBISGTOST C5IOX Or WSBJTKSDAT. The "Humors" from the Rio Grande. The despatches received from Major General Taylor, by last night's mail, are frow Monterey of the I4th December, at which date there were no tidings of tho movements of Santa Anna upon the ad vance post at Saltillo. The General was to have left on the 15th for ictoria; but if the accounts be true that we see pub lished in the newspapers, he must have returned to Monterey before he had pro ceeded a half a day on his march. The force at Siltillo, under Gen. Worth, is about 1,700, which was to have been re inforced, according to previous advices from General Taylor, by two regiments of volunteers, which would make an aggre gate of about 2,000 men. The force at Monterey under Major General Butler, inclunding the division which marched on the 13th and 14 th December under Generals Twiggs and Quitman, which no doubt was recalled and rapidly marched in the direction of Saltillo, should the news of the advance of Santa Anna turn out to be true, would amount to about 3,400, which, with Gen. Worth's com mand, would make a force of about 6.000. We have seen a letter from an officer at Brazos Santiago, of the 23th of Decem ber, which expresses the opinion that M3 sufficient force was doubdess collected at Saltillo to meet the emergency; and if Santa Anna's movement was any thin- more than a JtlnU he has unquestionably been repulsed." A letter from Major General Scott. now commanding all the land forces in Mexico, dated December 28th, from Bra sos Santiago, states that he should leave the next day, via Matamoras and Camar go, in search of official news by which he should be governed accordingly. Refer ring to the reports of the movement of the enemy, he states that, in the mean time, events may take him to Monterey, and that if Santa Anna be in the offensive he must be repulsed," tc. One of the letters we have seen from the Rio Grande of so recent date as De cember 23 (the latest) expressly states; "We are here without accurate informa tion, and the Ueneral-m-chief, now com manding all the forces in Mexico, has de termined to move rapidly forward with the view of ascertaining facts upon which he can rely. We should have been off to-day, but for the difficulty ol landing our saddle horses from the steamer yes terday." The force under Gen. Wool at Parra3 is about 2,400, which is in excellent or der. Capt. Washington.s company of flying artillery, more than 100 strong, has a battery of eight pieces, and is represen ted to be one of the most efficient and well appointed companies which belong to the army. It probably is the best, as it is the strongest. Whatever may be the truth of the rumors afloat, it will be seen that, with the junction of Wool's division, which should be counted upon. General Taylor, upon this emergency, will probably be at the head of an army of more than seven thousand, and we have no fears of the result. From South America. Advices from Rio de Janeiro to the 16th November have been received at New Y'ork, including accounts from Montevideo to the 1st of November. General Rivera and President Oribe had set their forces in motion, and it was expected that they would soon meet and have a battle. Governor Rosas had pro hibited communication with the revoked province of Entre Rios, but the report of the alliance of that province with Corri entes still wanted confirmation. A horrible shipwreck had taken place on the coast of Brazil, near Bahia, of the Swedish ship Brenza, by which some thirty lives were lost, and a lanje amount of property destroyed: many of the crew were actually starved to death. North Carolina. We learn that the Resolution appropri ating Ten Thousand Dollars for the equipment of the North Carolina Regi ment of Volunteerss now enrolling for the Mexican war, which passed the Senate of that State, (with a preamble declaring the war to have been begun by the act of the Executive of the United States,) has also passed the House of Commons The appropriation has heretofore been made. We trust that the amount of this appro priation, and of all like appropriations by the State Governments, will in due time be reimbursed to them by the Gea eral Government. A farmer once hired a Ycrmonter to assist him in drawing logs. The Yankee, when there was a log to lift, generally coctrived to get the smallest rnd, fur which the farmer chastised him, and told him always to take the butt end. Dinner came, and with it a sugar loaf Indian pudding. Jonathan sliced off a generous portion'of the largest par?, giving the. fir mer a wink, exclaimed: "dticays the butt tmf. A beautiful buitrrjl), wa scrn in ?,cw ' ark, vjw Jersey, on the 2d iust.