. 2ir ~ : r-t 1 ,6,1, . ..--, - . 4-it , ,, ,, ,,!9., .. ___ 5 ...- ya w .._,:.,,,,.. -, -rioir ,- ..11a,.6? , • 'CUM - 6 -1 , - ,: t e„. etk. e It" ' • , From the ortit Amerman. 'ivalastlant iligenee from New • f . exico. —Mexican inferreetion at Taos i —Go4 mar" Bent Aiirdir4r,As saisistation of lillmerieans—Probable.Cap ' i titre of SaotaWe-- Trap set to= hire Col, Doniphan—Ltlinnineot Danger:" PITTSBURGH, March 16. By river we hive St. Louis papers four . days in advance of mail, with dates from Fe ibiethigtimPOttnitt 'There has been an exteitisive Mexican insurrection , at Taos. Ad the Spaniards who evinced any sympathy with the Atiterican cause had been compelled fo'escape.. • Gov. Bent, Sttphen Lee, Acting Sheriff, Gen. Elliott Leei Henry Seal, and twenty .Americans, ,we -killed and their familes despoiled. Theq Alcalde was also This all occurred on the 17th January. The insurrectionhad6nade formidable held, and the disaffection! was rapidly spreading.— The insurrectitinists were sending ex presses out all over the country to raise assistance. Th 4. number engaged in the out- 'break at Taos *as about 600. They were using every argument to incite the Indians s to hostilities, and were making preparations to take possesio of Santo Fe. 4 The Amer' ns, at Santa Fe, had only about 500 effect, ve men there, the rest were on the sick list4or had left to join Cot Don iphan. Such being their situation, they can not send suceoe,fout, as they are hardly able to defend themselves. It thought that Santa Fe must be . pailtured, as neither the Fort nor Block -hnusfi are completed. It is annoln4d as the intention of the in surrectionists ttho captured Taos, ,to take possession of the government wagon trains, which are carrying forward our supplies, and thus cu't off all communication. Thtreprese4tations made to Col. Doni phan, that Chihuahua would be ; an easy 1 conquest, were h vidently intended as a lure to entrap him, beget a spirit of security, and lead hips far of into the interior, where he might easily bi cut off It is the general opinion at Santa Fe that if Gen. Wool }lad gone direct to Chihuahua there' would hive been no trouble in New Mexico. ColiDoniphan had pOssession of El Passo del ?lone on the 28th December. Letters had beta received from the Gover nor of Chihuahua, st ) ating that Gen. Wool was within throe daY's march of the capital. This, too, was itloubtless enother ruse to lure —Col. Doniphan". on in confidence, and cut into off from 41 change of escape, or of fall , jag back upon S anta Fe, to relieve it in its emergency. ; 1 The Mexicans are bold in their tone and confident of capturing Col. Doniphan and .- his command, irltich consists of about 600 =en, 500 of them being Of his own troops, - the first regimeint of mounted Missouri vol unteers, and aidetachment of 100 men from Santa Fe, ,under command of .Lieut CoL Mitchel, of dot 2d regiment—consisting of 30 men from Olark's battalion of light•artil lery, under co wand of Captain Hodson and Lieut..Krihben, and 70 from Cal. Price's regiment and Col. Willock's battalion ' They then assert that they will-massacre ev ery American in New Mexico rind Confiscate all their g00d.4 A letter froi Lieut. Abert, 11. S. Topo graphical Engineer, of later date; confirm all the above intelligence. The details of the battle of Bi-acito are also confirmed.— The massacre beyond doubt has been a hor rible •% , one, of ich we have as yetbeard the beginning;. a ~s 1 the insurrection •has been kept so quiet Until all was ready for the out ••toreak, that pub handful of trooplC must be demolished, before any effort can be mode l to relieve thetii from the most advtineed of •our Western fitilitary posts. Lieut. Abe*'s men suffered very severely coming to Miisouri. The calls on_ gov.ern meat for pronipt assistance and large 'rein forcements are strenuous, and the, situation of our gallentimen, far away from succor, `'in the heart Of an enemy's country, shows - the rashness i which has characterized • the whole advance into New Mexico. Eight of tlke, leading men engaged in the 'conspiracy-141e arrived, (our despatch does not say toker4) who ha've made a full con fession of the /whole plot. Letter* reciived also state that Col. Cook -and the Mormon battalion were 350 miles beyond Sapt.4 Fe. • They were generally in good 'health-- and progressing slowly. - 2 I • Fit= t # . 11. ' mayane, . tr ' . • • , Lt i trout Itexico. After. he 'lig of the mail for the East yesterdayw4 were, through the courtesy of 1 friend, placed in [possession of paperafrom , the city of *Nice, a . fortnight , later than we had before. seven. They consisted of copies of ' .. El ,Eepublictino of the 11th, 12th, and 13th ofFebruary.i We proceed to an examine -1 tion-of their tiontents. B,y_ a despetch from the commandant of „Vens.Croz, anted the 7.th of February, ive _learn thatinktbat day, Senor D. Alejandro ~lose Atochalimded at Vera Cruz under a flag of truce• froinilieritnericaiisquadrun, with *spathes frost th e govornmentoftlie United s l States, whicft , he as charged to deliver in person !to thee/lies can government. ; A letter is bed in the El Republica gto announcing that General . Santa Anna • tools his deptfrture from San Luis on dui 2d itebrpary. Ilia destination, is said to be Monterey.,,t#ards which point the main bo - sly of. his twiny hes already moved.. The uji n -following is iltiva the number of troops of t under his Man , with the; dates of their departure f th city of San Luis: List of the- loops which have recently mar -26i , . heti Monterey. , • iiapury be appers and Artit _„„krists. wi 'n' teen guni of hen ., 4,y, calibre - - ,650 e kinmstty. 234.15 t, d, 4th, sth, 10th, . and Illth Regiment! of the Line,. ~, ~and,Jst..tinii 3d LightTropps, ~- , -8,240 Aguary.;44,4th Light Tzoopt!,Mik.. .... e 4 4804 An29a, ISt, Active of li fi r. : ft , c r ook i r ,, z :if udalajirp;do:' of , , ...MTN, - ' Ot , ereta-roi do. of , • ~., ii Alifitto9•l • • f,„ r. :.. • • , ' 2 *Y-is :;, , r f ~.• 1 1; :i. ;,..,=.,;,, ~,., 1 L d ' ' ' ,l* , de?. • , .'• San Luis,, looo .l.44,PCititltO „Pee ,Pen*dicondßetl ilti4vaff,* • in n ' , 7" •. 014 with three , , , ' i jtieees, o vy , bre, ,withilieir . 1 - .A1P4 1 ,4 ~ -; 2,, - ,-, - •,.r.;. 5 "1„ , ... • ,: 4 1 ' 1 i - .5..i.,1 : • 0; - ' l. l ‘ r.tPriL,.-`! . " - - s - ; ; :,.i,: -,:-. - g.•'• s o -Diiiiiin ii ! d: Ge . )dejia. . ___,„ / , ..7, 1: ,',91000 B= • e - artti!ery was supp lied eamin over mu rounds' Of aisfitimiihii: 4l . l. ' 7 1 : In the ahiive eiinmeiation nfkil noi ded the force - stationed at Tight nor, ,brigades of qene4ls Minton *rdiuvereil At the ladle aeeounte'froni;:Saiga Anna he was•at Mateltuala, where he arrived on tlielth of Februffry."" • - Matehualn is a town nearly.north of San Luis and nbAttt one third4ote, wsy thence to Sala), according to the maps before us. His army #as in the utmost distress. ' From:the N. 0. Picayune March 10. By . the arrkfal of the U. revenue_ cutter Taiwaid,'diplairillinies, a large mail was yesterday frem Anton Lii.ardo. 'Our own letters carntidown 'to the Bth February, on which day-t6norther prevlailed, which •pre vented ',the -Forward - from leaving before the 2d of March,. inst. ' The information which follows wo ileriVe exblusiVely from our let ters arid•paPers. It appeari that Senor Atocha, whose. ar rival at Vett Cruz, with despatches, we an nounreed, yetiterday, went over there on the Forward, frbm this city, direct. • He reached there cui thek9th ult., And . proceeded imme diately to Mexico. He returned from the capital on the 26th ult., and repaired - again iinmediatelys on board the Forward, and is now, we ,tirsume, on his way to Washing ton. It is itht supposed he liasticeomplished much by hitt mission. The Mexicans had personal obictions to him, and his reception by the authorities of Vera Cruz, and the peo ple and goiternment of Mexico, was any thing but :eordinl. Some speculations in regard to h is mission will be found in the copious antLvery interesting correspondence hereafter subjoined." Our rent:krt.-will learn with infinite pain. that Passed Midshipman Rogers has been ordered toiPerote, and that he is now con fined in that gloomy prison. Two batiks have arrived off Vera Cruz with volutuders from the North, and gone into Anton Lizurdo. One of them is the St. Cloud. NVe cannot at this moment rec ollect froth chat port the St. Cloud sailed. The news from Santa Anna is no later than we- It4e already given, though it is more full. • Military Critics condemn Santa Anna's plan of campaign. • They. say he wasdriven from his original designs ; by the cry of" ap athy" made against biro. They anticipate that he will now drive every thing before him, and decent ('.en. Taylor, but complain that he leaves the coast of Vera Cruz unpro tected, and can obtain no. advantages that will be deCisre. He must necessarily sub sist his .troops• upon the. poor inhabitants of the country he traverses With his hordes, by which they will become .:exasperated. But the great point insisted upon is that, Santa Anna hasileft the country open for the march of the Anrrican troops ,upon the capital, where they may dictate ,a peace before he Can r eturn, from his distant expedition. The latest advices we see from Chihuahua are to the:l6th ofJanualy ; a fortnight later than our :former . accounts. The city had not then been taken by our troops, nor do the seettni thing said of their advance upon it. Four Mexican soldiCrs who were in the action Of December' 2fith had arrived at Chihuahua and given.their account of the fi g ht It differs but little from the one we have before published. They say the loss of the Mexicans was less than twenty killed, and that of tbeAmericans was fifty-two kill ed, of which number was a captain. They .Protest that griat,cowardice was shown by a portion of their troops; and demand a full. and official account of The action, that the brave may be rewarded; and cowards stig matized as tbeY deserve. The citizens of El Paso are charged with capitulating in a shameful Manaer, and ~ the Americans are said to have abused their power as shame fully. They pursued some of the Mexicans to Sail Elettario, a small fort on the Rio del Norte a few: miles below El Paso, and there icouttnitted depredations, carrying off "the archives" to El paso. 1 From the St. Lonis !Daily Union, March 9. Addltiont Partienhtirs of the Massa- A friend at Independence has sent the de tails of the insurrection et Taos, as far as they were known. •• The Alcalde of TacCl acted a double part. He wrote to the Alcalcle of Los Vegas .that he would join him with six hundred men in an expedition against snnta Fe, and nt the same time sent word to Mr. John A. Wells, a i Moro, - that he was n friend to the Ameri cans,: • For t his pretended friendship, it seems . he was killed bY the Mexicans. The Alcalde of Los Vegas informed Wells that he refused to second the outbreak of the mob, and desiiued to do-operate with the Americani., 'Gov. Bent had re:Pased the Mexicans at SantaF d, 'charged intended insurrec tion, and had been a l t Taos a few days, ,where hie family reside* lie is married to a Mexican lady and Owns a Curm near that place. On' the 17th of January, the mob iroSetou the- AreerictiOs there, and Lot sassinated them, whom was • Gov. Bent, 'Stephen Lee, Marshal of that dis trict, Mr. Leal,, (suppOed to be James White Leal, U. States :District Attorney, thougtiO4t known with certainty,) Gen, El liott Lee' S 1 'of St. Lo u is, a 'Mr. Turley, . who had a distillery in the neighborhood, which he defended ; with eight hien for two days. 'This outbriak 'was anticipated, and some of the instigators had been imprison ed. 'The Mexicans slew o f only the Amer icans!tliere, but all the SPailiards supposed tote fuverable to the AtrietiC.an cause. About twenty Americans snug have been ainrdere.d. When the ;4a:1 - reached Bent's Port;'a'stnall, company was sent' out ',to aid the stragglers and recoVei what properly could be .fouid. Altrof* cattle and ef fects ,of tlie r Axnericsuis had been plundered. 1 FOOD ,p 'REPLEcTioir.—Separate man kind from e 0 ,pth,at astmuch- as ;possible, and cut , o$ : . e - poor, the unfortunate, the de graded,, tlio icious, fromithe sym pathy, the i exailiPle,:ili ` advice ; the nfluence, of those more fortmaie,,prusperous, or more virtu ous. Build mote churdlies, so extravagant iti exPendinireili at' it! pdol-rigin dare not look into one df them ;' triiicli'lsiii isl(forli - se4i; cushion' lui 'vital witli've 'its; • priivide *W. did,wirri giye miniiiii - good sitlarlies, Oita 4, Confihe ItOtki to tlii'ciii'flelcif theii. - , - kitt On'ti irk; ii . istt AhCh nitiriertlit "Ctiti,anity ha' icilittlerniatience : ,iii Mak lig pool. trien . goOtt ti t iiiiii. ,