Fltoll RE ARMY ! EICO MIN I. TERRIBLE & BLOODY BATTLES! Tremendous Loss of Life : The flight of Santa Anna to-Q.ua _ daloupe! VICTORIOUS ENTRY OF THE AMERICANS IN TO THE CITY OF MEXICO! ' SANTA ANNA WOUNDED, AND GEN BRAVO KILLED ! Vigorous prosecution of the War. The N. Y. Herald of the 3d inst. con tains the following highly important intelli gence• from the teat of war; brought by ex press in advance of the mail: BALTIMORE, Oct. 2—Evening. The Steamer James L. Day arrived nt New Orleans on the 25th ult., with the most important intelligence yet received from the seat of war. —We extract frOM the N. 0. Picayune of the 26th ult., received by the overland ex press for the N. Y. Herald, the following par ticulars The Arco Iris of Vera Cruz had received letters from Mexico, under date of the Oth, stating that on the 7th the Mexican Com tuissiohers declared that the propositions made by Mr. Trist were inadmissible ; in consequence of which Gen. Santa -Anna convoked ri council of generals, who decided that notice should be given to Gen. Scott that the armistice was at an end, and ap pointed the 9th for'the recommencement of hostilities. On the 6th - af September, Gen. Scott ad dressed a letter to Santa from Taeubaya, accusing him of having violated 'several arti cles of the armistice, one of which was that not allowing the American army to obtain supplies from the city of Mexico. • General Scott demanded an explanation, and con cludes as follows : ' • • • • «I hereby formally you, that if I do nut receive the most com plete satisfaction on all these points, before 12 o'clock to-morrow, I shall consider the armistice as terminated from that hour." , To this letter Gen. Santa Anna replied at some leagtb, and with great severity. He 'accused Gen. Scott of havintr . violated the :terms of the armistice in refusing to allow flour, froth the , mills in the vicinity, to be brought into the city, and says that the A inericap wagons were driven out in conse quence of the objectionable conduct of the - officers accompanyinb• - them.' Santa Anna also charges Gen. Scott with having sacked the Mexican towns in the vicinity of the capital, and robbed - and desecrated the churches, and stealing and destroying arti cles held sacred by.every Mexican. He concludes as follows : • I flatter myself that Your excellency will be convinced, on calm reflection, of the weight of my reasons, but if by misfortune you should , seek only a pretext to deprive the first city of the American_ Continent of 'the opportunity to. free the unarmed popula tion of the horrors of war, there will he left me no other means of salvatiOn but to repel - force by force, with the decision and energy which my high obligations impose upon me On the 7th, General Herrera, as Com mandant of the city of Mexico,' addressed the clergy, exhorting them to exert all their influence to incite the people to arm them selves, and prepare to resist the American army. On the .Sth, General Scott attacked the Mill del Rey or King's Mill, in the immedi-' ate vicinity of Chapotepec, and, aecording, to the Diario del•Gobierno, and the Boletin, published at Atlisco, nehr Puebla, our army'l was repulsed, after a short conflict, in which we lost about fear hundred in killed, and from six to seven hundred in wounded, and fell back upon Tacubava... The account given by the ,Boletin, repre sents the battle to have been the most bloody and severely contested of the whole war.— This, howaier, is a Mexican account, it con cludes as follows : At H o'clock the enemy commenced a retrogade rnovetnent, and by 2 o'clock in the afternnon he withdrew ail his forces to Tacubayn, abandoned' the two points he had occupied, and blew up the house of Mata, although some say it was set on fire by a bomb from Chapoltepec. It is.believed that Generals Twiggs and Pierce directed the attack and that they put in motion about 8,000 men. It is certain that the fire was more intense and brisk than at Churubusco; It is impossible to ascertain the loss of either side. Ours does not amount to 100 killeitand 250. wounded. There are a few missing—nearly all not killed or. wounded retiring to Chapoltepec. .. The enemy, according to confession of an Irishman, who came over to us, in the eveningAarried off 400 dead and 600 or 700 wounded. • We have to lament the lois of Gen. Leon, since dead ; that of Col. Balberas, of the valiant Cole: Huerla and Geleati, and of the determined car. Mateor of Puebla. A Meajpan letter announces that Riley and his legion of Sr. Patrirk, 70 in - number, were ordered bfthe court martial to be hung. The sentence wns approved by Gen. Scott, and oittbe Bth of Sept., the whole legion was imegin the presence of the army; as also of the enemy' ' The Diatio' del Gobierno Says* " at half past 4 o'clioCk itt:the morning, the Amen eatte-attatked the'liosition of the mill of El Rey :closeto tbe'fortress of Chaptiltepec.— Theirliiumeroueend'hreve columns, were,. hciwever, repulsed three, - times by valiant tot. diers, who this day gaie brilliant proofs of their patriotism and valor; more than a thousand of the enemy remained on the field Of,,battle,atisi;on Our side, the leas has been itanw.' 'Attu baribat number, Minn to lament 7:s :14 .. tirof the gisilant,,Col., 4obal...Lucas, And Gmteral Dots AtitotOdei.eon, beilsiirounded: : together with -several.,tber ifittlieguhdied elders and officers. ,-Irlittrei )3ll4ll Anna Commanded ju person the egemes which (weed the Aitericaes te.„o7. ..,.:-__,-„... -.....f.!......,,-; ; .-- , - trent faking witty hem, within conviction that', thi -- onlylraN blood—that the y__ - iinotpeneti of Mexico, and at' It events the find their supulch r 'ti We translatelheitiubjoitied le laps to the Arco trisowithout v its correctness :—", ,When Gen. doned the &till El Rey, a born from Chapoltepec c fell among t tion wagons of the nemy,iwthe ] mill, causing four of il*in:tp . which 300 Amenc, as are - said 't blown uN l includitig- Gen,,Wor cording to laccourAS ..had not . heard from, the fol lowingdafat The next . ftecoliMs'we have f ital, come in a letiO tO:the Arc the 10th Vik, of WhiCh the foil extract-"AlThe MexiCan gore taken three huridreil thousand d.I were being; sent by a Comm to the' eneiny's camp. General expired. I3y the enclosed slip that the Anicricaiiii'niutilated ow sassinated the unfortimate Iris) taken at the brittle'of Chunibuso Another! letter from the ca l date of 11th and If th says," It the enemy is c avineed of the it of reducing II e S ty, by any r, than by bombii din* it ; hemline doubt that he it s hist 900 to 100 were placed hers dkionzba? by the Bth, and amolfg 'them thir , cers and three 'colonels were kil colonel wounded. 'leappears th of Gen. Pillow is nitdertain. They have expelled from the the itihabitantS'of.the village of order to establish there their h head-quarters. •, , On the 12th Sept.,' at 5 o' morning,.the hells awoke us by t mettt of an alarm. The Batt: Antonio Abad, and the corres tery of the enemy, 'opened upo We haire seen discharged ty t multitude of bombs', the grentes which burst in, the liir ' before t ourtrenehes. At -.the same commenced at Chapltepec, , ti side of the 'town,, acid in th , whence came the attaok. A. sl from the enemy are stationed d cavalry and infantry, who we 1 the foe. We opened at half, at the battery of Garipa Belen, r from that starting' from the er Nuevo, which is situated in the ed by the causeway leading to La Pledas and Taeuhaya." This brings'us, ~:§iys the Pic one, to the 12th ; but at what; hour of the ay we are not informed. Of the eventful c4nouement, we have only a bridf account; at sufficient to assure us that the Americans live cliiev ed a brilliant triumph, and that tir army isl revelling in the Halls of Monte' utnan. The only reliable account we hive of the last struggle before the Capital, is i a letter ad dressed Jo Dir. Diamond, our °tremor at Vera. Cruz; from Oiizaba, as fol ows: " OItiZAIA, Sept. 19, 1847. T haVe the honor to inform yoti that an ex ress arrived here this evening from Mexico, ‘-hid) bringi4 intelligence that GO. Scott wa in the city of Mexico. That cuil th'epth th . Arerican troops took Chapoltepec: and the Citadel, and went intojhe ekv that nigl t. General BravO was killed, Mid Goneral Santa Anna was wou6letl in a te arm, ant has - retired with the remainderinf his troops. which have suffered s'o m b c h , ,to Gauduldupe. Your friend, k 4 .! A letter' from a' c? all that is sid in iht grees with it in statil tied by assault an !I Anahuac has it on t' forks of Chapultepeo 14th and 15th the rii that a part of . our morning of the 16ili at Chapoltepec. I" ditable source, confirms above, add only disa ' 0 that the ditv was car the 14th. 14th. %he Sun of the 12th, th heights and .c, were car ied—On the ity was bombarded, and army enter .d it on the 1, the balance remaining limenciin 1 • . 11 r•lois be have tory his no, oss of - life.l T. that aCti' and w. activity u In regard to the yune says—As t-ti entered'the city, w• We fear IlUs new vj ed without a (Treat! ,z .1 can • accounts commenced on the with more or less! took possession oft A passenger us that there was'; ie city he JannesLlDaYinforms report ninpi4 the Alexi , thitt we Icist 1700 men led, but he Could trace h ree. Anuf t's loss at cans at Vera Crm in killed and woutii to no authentic scOl estimates Gen. Sep third orhis army: y fic, We now comet what has for with so much! nxiety, th which Mr. Tris t . nd the Mex ed to negotiate— in which i that there was nc(dispnsition the Mexicans-to teat from tht propositions are ftircictil itrthe annex a synopsis . I i The first three . articl s, relating to giv ing up of towns iind i unition of war, the exchange lof prisoner , &c. ;were readily agreed to by both, pa es. The 4th article relating toj the bdundaky - line was mainly the sticking point! . Mt. Tristls.proPosition was as follows: I " The dividing: line ibetareen the two re publics will commence in the Gulf of Mexi co three leagues' from land v i fronting the mouth of the ' lii' Grande, th nce upwards through the middle of said ri er to a point where it totiches!lthe Mesita line of New Mexico at the aline southwes of the lingi tude'of the northern line of New Mexico, until intersected b y the first ar i of the Gila. If it should not b intersected by any arm of that river, tbeiice to the poi tof said lone nearest to said arm ; thence-i. , a direct line to said arm,.deliending the ame, 'and by the river Gila, Imp its disci] rge into the Colorado river, Lid frora •tliei ce downward by the Coloriukt and the mi , ~ e of!the- Gulf of California, tu the-Pacific i , ean." • Articles 5; 6 Mid 7 'prep:id I ; meat of a sum otinoney.(am , ' tioned,) the ,abatidimment ofi gainst Mexico, atid.the settle . claims of citizen* , Att. Sgi • States the free nesigition of , T,ehauntepec. The followi ,_I hiesigoposition polo the-bo ..t.' The dividing ' line hetwee' pUblies sliall.commence in the ico,,threektigues from; land; southern mouth of Corpus Ch ' a litzsighttiinetiroughsaidba 1 It*Os of Ilicp—del,..N ~ ° ' , to - foil , i course;ofTlOtt tie ' :.to its sou .f ii course of I,lloe ' er,Nueces w : I 1 tier: -Nei! , MeXicit'. in dm east-southeast 15 It 'll " en thence follov- the actual from; 40r,Neati-Meiiico,.. - -,hy the east, north, end 10aft'a NVIV filexici4 by. the north thit 7 ttse en, which 411Fserve as' the boundary of the two republics, from the point at which it touches the frontier Of - New Mexico to the Pacific. The"governmentofMexicoagiees not to found any new -establishment or col°. niesin the space of land which lies between the Rio Grande and.the Neuces. Five stip ulatiilms for 'the --- p - ayment of •the sum (not .riamed) to _Mexico, inconsideration,of terri tory thus Ceded." t douht, rslie ht . = ricer's of theicitir will tftet* T 'er 004 for itrez a ail ; disehliiied e the . xplodeil by have been r wilt!' tie en seep or acubaye." in the tap- Iris, dtited wing isl an rnenvlnis liars, which • reial hciuse Swath has ou will see 1, cruelly as- The Washington -Union has received a supply!of Mexican ,papers, by late arrivals, froml,Which it , gives , extracts, that supply somc,Orticulars, which go to make the a bovelmore perfect. Copy efp. Private Letter Received at Vera Cruz. • Op the sth instant, the conference was still going on in the city, but was conducted with great secresy. Letters written by two offiCers in the State Department of Mexico, state that Gen. Scott's conditions will not be accepted, and that hestilities will be renew ed.. This intelligence, however, cannot be relied on, although it appears to be the opin ion entertained by the greater portion of the Mexican people, A continuance of the war is. urged by the inhabitants remote from the American forces ; those in their vicinity are . touch more quiet, uhd appear to wish to stibtnit without resistance. They have suf fered so much from the robberies and mal treatment inflicted on them by the guerril las, that they appear anxious for the latter to be driven off by the American forces. On the 3d inst., a Council of warot which Gen, Santa Anna piesided, was held in the , . capital. He represented the distressastate of the country, and requested the opinions of the rest of the council. generals Bravo, Alvarez-and Tornel, expressed their 'appro bation of the manner in which Santa Anna had, up to that time, condticted the war; and, declared that if he thought proper to enter into a treaty honorable to the nation, they would sustain him in it. But if, on the • contrary., the conditions of the treaty were, in their opinion, burdensoriie, they were de tertained to oppose them. The armistice terminated on the 3d, by order of the governor who will not allow any communication with the American caatp, except by a' passport granted by him- I self. Wbb were lital, under ppears that probability fiber means there is no ) men, who he action of lv-seven ofri ed, nod one the death lr houses all I tkxcoac, in .9itals and lock in the e annunde :ries of an onding .bat each other. a enemy a number of ey 'reached •ur a firing 1 $ n the right I. mountains ort distance •ur forces of Ire watching er six, from I r it may he I d of Bacco $ ogle, form e village of Sixty drag oons of the ' American .army set out fur T ohuca, a city some fifty miles. from the capital, Cur the purpose of procur ing provisions. The governor,of that place bad determined on attacking them ; but on their approach, strange to say, he furnished thetit with a guide to a plantation near by, whefre they succeeded in purchasing alt they wanted. pan the 2d, four hundred. Mexicans, of .16ower class, (leperos) attacked a build ng i2ontainin g stores fur the American ar my) . The Mexicans appelir t?. hove been much elated at this incident—tlie governor extolling it as an act of great '‘)atriatisin ; and the official newspaper contat is an arti cle in allusion to the subject, a " full of all kinds of invective against the ' ' .ericans. Highly Important—Pesief PrAoositions re jected---The Mexicans Refusing to fir the boundary line of Texas beyond the Nuecci--The War Renewed--Another Battle at Chaimltepec—Mexicans De feated—Gen. 14'orth Wounded-- The Mexicans preparing for another and final Battle--Reported Revolt at Puebla. The Ledger's Special Express arrived at BaltiMore last night with the following im portant intelligence from Mexico, which wag immediately transmitted by telegraph 1: - , this office. It will be seen that the Mex icans have crowned the measure of thei-, filly by. rejecting the propositions of Mr. Trist for . lin lionorable•pence. This is the more surprising after their late cignal dis enttifiture-at the very gates of their capital-, inasmuch as -the terhis Which are stated as thoSe offered are MuCh more favorable than we' ever expected 'oar government would grant,,or that so perverse and hetidstrnng nation deserved, after plunging the two countries into a sanguinary and expensive war by their own intolerable pride and wil- , fulness. They will never get such favora- 1 'ble terms again; and this 14t rejection of the olive brunch,-will bring deservedly upon them the greatest calamity that can befit I a nation, conquest and an armed occupation of the country. We hope that our, government is done with all peaceful offers, tend that now it Will pursue the war as if it Were in earn est: No morel:flocking. the Mexicans down with ore hand, and helping them up with the other. 'TIM many gallant hearts have been stilled in death by thii tilicy. Each blow when itiuck should be followed up by another still siOnger, until the Mexicans be- come convinied that we go there to fight and not for passtime, and that peace can only be procured by suing for it themselves. All our advances in this way have Rs yet ' only.allowedi,he enemy time to recover from the effects of defeat, that followed up would have- been overwhelming to the foe. .The Mexicans, wi h a faithlessness that should put them heyend the pale of further honorti ble(considerstion, have always managed to find some excuse for violating their engage ments. We . fi nd Santa Anna endeavoring to tide the dilgrace of breaking his pledges, byiniuking aitaccuintion against !Gen, Scott, lfo *bleb w,eiventute to say there exists not la hadow of t:eason, -It is one of the , many tri Its of that; knave,. who is fertile in such di reditable ;:resources. The news ; retire set Xs 9-en. Scott preparing for a final and -Ide iiive.attailt upon the city, and we have tAdoubt it is. by this time in his power.— en with. -the new troops which are emir . sttidy ping, to his assistance, he will be ab e to hold his conquests ,; cleat the. guerrih il la from the main route, and make the con quered country bear the buider_and cost of supporting his army, as it should do.. • Boar:mos, Sept. 30th---9 o'clock, Pi. M. An. eitra4rom 'the office of :the Mobile Tribunes dated. -Sept. 25, repeivediby the pony.-express this. evening, i announces -the - arrival . at Pensacola of the brig, Oceela, on the evening - of the 21st, after st - pasOge of five dayi" from Vera - trot. -:;.,;;:1, ' ~i- - • .: !rbelrihune:is‘ indebted , tow piSsenger kart , Petatatola , .Veen, , Cruz-. of Anahittur44,-- 16thi - and - -alsofore- letter freinTeiteittiole. , ; --Verbally .tbeArribine Atli scillitilit them :has. , teem' , a rends, 'at ~., s, the Pica .re the army Jg authentic. been nehieir ' The 'Alexi 'e hostilities re continued l in our arm?' er passenger quarter tost been looked basis upon cans propos wou Id seem' n the part of • first. The extreme. I for the pay nt not ,men all claims a int of private the; United I, Isthmus of is Banta-An- dry. iine: . theltwo re. Guifist Mex. tindliciini the inn in to the mouth then,ce- Ithe, '2 %Fiemille • stniiiihtiline On the 20th—We copy from memoranda kept by one of the c'ompany- - we encoun tered one of those terrible storms-which oc casionally vi4it the plains, and had to halt and hold our iteams, to keep them frcun run rig away. Aug. 21—It rained all night' and we awoke wet and comfortless, with such bleating, braying and swearing arotind us, as is seldom heard here, or any where else. Aug. = - 22—Met Copt, Murphy and Wm. McKnight, traders, with train or thir ty vinoons. Aug. 23.--Met Capt. Korponay, with his company-of mounted men, and flir ty government wagons. Aug. 24—Met, this morning, two compa nies, Missouri mounted men„ and at one, P. encamped with another, on rabbit-ear creek. August 26th—It rained hard all night; the morning is cttld and rainy, and duplicate over-coats are absolutely necessary —met one company of mounted men, with sixty government wagons. ,titf4ust 27 Met Capt. Book's company of Illinois N,,,i -unte.t4 Infantry, with a largif wagon train. We also met Col. Newby and Lieut. lie Ledger: Borukin. From tha Pu Late from Atxxieb , I --- - Puebla, and .that Gee . .zeott there add at the city of Medico had loin two it:QM:and men. ' . I The Tribune says: Hostilities comntenc ed on - the,evening olthel3ih, when ; our troops had a brush' with the test of the Hesican EMI From the St. Louis Opnbßean Sept. : Later from SOota Fe. Arrival of Gen. Price, Dr. De Camp, U. S A., and others, at Fort iLeavenwort gress of the Troops 'marching to Santa We learn from Fort iLeavenworth, that Gen.,Price, 'Dr. De Camp, U. S. A., and others, in advance of the volunteers' whose term of service in New Mexico had expired, arrived at that post on the 16th, from Santa F. They. left Santa Fe on the 11th of August, pruceedingrby easy marches to Mo ro. %Olen they took their departure, all was then quiet in New Mexico, which was then held by three companies of U. S. A.. dragoons, and three companies of volunteerS which had re-enlisted under Major 'Walker. On the the 15th of August, they met Lieut. Allen, with Capt. M'Nair's company of mounted men, and they encamped together on the Moro. Next day, Colonel Eaton, with his; battalion of infantry, reached the same point ; he had with him a large train of government wagons, and it large drove of beef cattle. On the 17th, two companies, commanded by Copts. Shepard and Jones, passed the camp, at Moro, where Dr, De :Chimp and others were waiting for the arri val of Cul. Price and Mr. Rich, sutler to Price's 'regiment. They did- not come up on this day. Mr. Rich had his team, wa gon and contents swept away, and .every thing destroyed, by a sudden and terrible mountain storm, while on his way from San ! ta Fe. He was so fortunate, however, as to recov er his trunk, which contained a large amount of gold dust, four miles down the mountain canon. On the leth, the company moved the camp three miles, still waiting for the volunteers to arrive, and at night they were robbed of three animals. Next day the vol unteers having arrived, they all took up their line of march for the United States. August 28th—Met (law. Kinney'; com pany of Illinois Volunteers, :at the iipptr crossing of the Cimarotie—alarge Gmrrn ntent train with them. August 29th—Met foor companies of Illinois Vohniteers, under command of Major Donaldson, unh a Gov ernment train of wagons, anti four hundred Government canle. Sept. mite: 3—Reach ed the crossing of the Arkansas, after spend tug a comfortless night in the:rain. Sep. 6th—Met Mr. Gold4ein, a trader, with his wagcms. Ite informed its, that Col. Rills, a t It two cninpanKe- of mounted volunteers, anti a large gov4rioneut train; was on the Lower Conti Creek road, a few miles distant. Sept. 7—ooh Price, Major Walker and Mr. Rich, with it mall escort; turned to the right, to intercept Col. Rally, for the purpose of getting tke mail. Thie day proved rainy, and they. reached our camp late and much fhtigutaii, Gen. Price, Mr. Rich and Dr. Du Camp and a small escort, left this day, with pro visions and blankets only, fits! For Leaven worth, where they arrived on Pie 17th, hav, ink marched mare than forq miles a day for more than seven days, and that with tir ed animals, and at the end of tan eight hun dred mile journey. . &YANKEE ENTERPRISE.-AMOIIg the first Americans who entered Verir Cruz on the cessation of hostilities was the owner - cif t small schooner from " dow n east," then an. . chored off 'the harbor. He inight be seen with breathless haste making his way to wards one of the hest hotels in the city, up: on entering which he vocifated for the "landlord." That 'imp rtant personage obeyed the call on the instant, but in evi dent trepidation, as ft matter of course ; when the Yankee, in sharp accent, which-convey ed the idea to the intimidated ;Mexican that.' his safety was in implicit acquiescence; thus accosted him : ".I want this !establisment„i house, lot, furniture, and evet4y thing as stands. What'll you take for It 1" The , Mexican, happy to he- permitted the privi-' lege of naming a price at all for property: which he supposed to be at thd mercy of the! enemy, named so much as he judged wanted to put a respectable disninee between' him and "los Yankees." " It'S a bargain shouted the "clown easter," tes be commen.4 ced shelling 'nut the money. "and now, my: friend," he added, " what is the least possi ble time it -will take you to dent. out." He was told that half an hour And in half an hour, accord:4y, ourfriend, the Yankee, was mixing juleps and other-' wise ministering to the c.umfollt and accont,-.' inodation or his countrymen !in particular and the public in general.—Norfolk Herald,. A WEER CIUTTER.—WiIi)e . Raymond: and Waring's caravan was baing exhibited : in the West, a gawky, long leg ed Jonathan L i. from the country, who had never " seen the, elephant," either literally or metaphorically, was stalking along carelessly! in the pavik, ion; alternately staring at the opt] a nitwits, 1 and cramming a sheet gingertiread into his.. mouth, when suddenly ' he Came bump a-t' gaitiiit Columbui. "Thunder and spikes !"I exclaimed he staggering backward shout, twenty paces, while his eyes uck out like' letters on align—a Alai d d erftger faith, Pot hale have mega here!" ; , f• I I :2kbuo Cate. (111)t BOD E FISHER. 4 Pr a;, the PaoOa's righta maintain, uenea, and unbribed by , gain." ' Here shall lb Unawed by VISE. O4JT. 7-, 1047. I„ coa ii A 111 R, Sua Buildin.:, N. E. ird and Do4k Streets,i Phila. to 'a : f.as As-tnt for to 16 Peo re,” and recline and receipt any e same for advertising DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIOn E. W. • corner of Th is authorized) pie's .Advoca monies due 'OR GOVERNOR, CIS R.' SHUINC, of Allegheny eo. FRA it CABAL COMMISSIONER, ' ,i MOH S LONGSTRETH, of. moni g omery to. - • YOU SKSATOR, F. . STREETER, g t piontr4., : onl4 , lTEsEtil:ATivr.g. ' ! SAM TEL TAG GAR T, ROBIEII ° T . R., LITTLE, of Wyoming To FOR, C9SIIII.SSIONERi E. IP. FARNHAM, .• of Leno i r. • *on. Avv,iroa. JOHN SIIBLEY;. of Gtbscn TnR MEASURER, HARVEY TYLER ; [ of Br*arater. 111110 NO4INITIONS. FOR GOVER,NOR. JAMES lIRVIN;i C.7ltre, :CANAL COMMISSIONER. JOSEPH NV, PATTON, of ii•umhrrrand co Fo R SEV ATUR. J. T. RICHARDS, of Montrose RUPRESENTATIVES, ABEL CASSEDY, BENJAMIN EDWARDS, of Wyoming to. comxasluNF.R. PENtEL C.ARPENTERi.-- of Harford - AUDITOR; 4310 S B. MOTT' , of Chcernut. T3E.VIURF.It, LANDI:R:'LINES, ( I f' movh PH Min -TUESDIT, fICTOBER 1 12, 1847 NOTICE. 11 1 0 }rave taken sheik iu thu People'l Those w igociutinti:• but are delitiqurtit in paying! Adva:ate A. the amount tunic sub.criptinn, arr....rriquested tn. without delay . It is hoped this hinti The sub6eriptioo may bo:thund at the: fnrk over" will suffice .k & rs:e.‘‘ itli whotn! it has been office of Lo left with ii,4ructions to collect nil tirye4rages speed: ta.test from MexicO. i The i'uhlic Ledger of the lsti inst., 'con-1 tains the startling intelligence ott a renew4 l of hostilities between Gen. Scott ,and the Mexicans. The Mexicans were repulsed;, i_h and driven adlt with a severe loss. It ‘ia hoped and elieved that peace would growitiu of the co4rence that had taken place be- ! : tween the two parties, but tIM Mexicans' have agaiitt broken, their faith and Merited thereby ainither severe castigatien/ which.' they will 'assuredly receive. By the litstoc T courits ouritroops were already inipossession of two of . the streets of the capiq,"and had driven the 'Mexican ford towardS the plaza;' , A desperate street fight wouldiniubably foli : low beforcl tho city was taken.; a* the IVlexi- s !1 cans - hild (liken advantage of the armistice' to.eirtrench , themselves in the city and pro• ride for 1141ing every kiiiilof missile at theio l foes. Lives will he 'sacrificed which might , have been 'saved bY entering the-city midi the retreating and panic stricken Mexicir,• after !bent late signal Aefeitt outside of thd. Walls ; but though [tinily will fall the result undoubted y, wII i he tlte taking of the Halls 1 of the Blooteziamas. What will follow we, know not, but the,policy of our gprernmen,t should he ntirelyAitterent from What it had Make . • . been. It Must, Make up its mind that tlii is to be tt i ' war"(vithout any peace until th - ( 1 Mexiconsre made heartily sick:Of it. Oust army:sho; Id ,act like conqueror's, and no( like the conquered, pitifully begging for: 1 / , peace at (l ev i er,. step. Make theAexican , feel the w lila of the wdr,•ititd cOmpensat i ourselves S' taking and holdingtheir terri+ , , tory,and 11 Innately adding it to th ? broad.dm r mains of i e Union. The next ihtelligeti4 .P from - Mix co Will he fraught wit h the great;: est interes anci•importance. The crisis.hue , come whi h is to decide whether Mexicti shall Orly unger have a separate tintional ex} isten4. I i t I . ! LATE !--!By lait night's ma i d we 'have; the/highlyjimportant intelligence lil i f the cap_ unie of thetCapltal by Gen. Scott,i, ftir eight ' days hard j fighting. Our loss • itillsaid to be 1700 killet) art' wilunded, and ;hut of the ' Mexicans ltnm nse. It ii rat morel thitt Gen; • - 1 Worth wap dal gerousli - Wountina i u and 0004. 1 Pillow ,killed,' ut needs confirm, ion., Satt:- ta Anne as ounded, and fled with apori ', don of hie trooin; to Gaudaloupo.l' ' 4 THE EL CTION. ,. = .-.! ?_:ii pur renders will iiot , l i fot.get that tbe tub- ernatorial!election Will e . heldl on , Tuesday T . next, the day of our .G ' era' Rlection ; ,and when they least their ores' i Giniernar, they will not forgetthe fidelity lintegrity and inflexibility with which that uniiiiitilly:, l 4 l ' teemed patiern-man of i democtiicy c llii gx cl,ellency Francis R. Shunk, : hattadhere4',4l Lind sustained the 'distinguishing: principles of the greai,Dermicratic - FainilY.l - His oppo sition to monopoly and encnimtgemeni-to iudividual ;enterprise brivie secured to him popular afiection in n degree which will tell i)veil of him at the Polls, ns th 6 news after election will attest.. , ,i;. , -,;.! , ; , hon. N. B. Etdr4d • It was announced in some'iifthe Harris burg papers several months - that, the distinguished gentlemen ! alioie upinea:in ten4tl sootr thereafter to visit his friends (of enemies he has nope,) who! surround ;his late home in the North. 'We have nut beard of his journeying, hithnaesd, lbut Eirepft dent that his advent wou'd he haileti With extraordieary gratification - by,!numeraus eit 7 izens in the Northern itier of Counties. No oae withiti the circle lof, : our acquairOnce, however conspicuous) ! r icisse4es iii a linbre, enviable extent the attractive elements : of personal popularity tl4tit,this,estimuhle man. -Higher destiny awaits him. • I , . , . - E. P. F4riihaiil.. The editor s of they "Dembcrat" say we 'oppose the election oti. 11Ir. Fhinhartt o, the . ;office Of County Cominisailmer, bectiqse he will not bend to our " nefarOus purlioses." What are those" purposes?"'. The Oectors !who road this shall know: - We are opposed Ito the people who pay:county taxe being. required to pay into the • Trsastiryleveral 'hundred dollars year after year tinnecessari .Iy. This.they do, and we kdow it. ' 111;64 money is paid out by the CoMmissiottersfer their own and others benefit which Should be retained to lessen taxatienlor County iex penses. We refer to their last yearly ac ' count in -proof of our assertion. .; It is asked, how is this diffiehlty to .be remedied.?. Wei say the " ice/raay be tire• ken" by the defeat of. E. rilFertthera:— "'But you then. elect a, Whig - 17. Suppose one Whig should be admitte'd to the. Board, . who might detect and expos i e the " nefariciuS" schemes of the majority.ifent i ontined , ; what great harm could result triterefrimn 1. 1 - As a , fair expose of 1 exorbitant char ges_ against the CoUnty, ;‘de copy the following editorial fitnp iThrpaper of Feb -11, 1847. Read itif i fellow Fai-payer, and, -if reasona4le, apprMie it—correct it is: .‘ The Commis AOners published last week in their pet Oitgait the ,” Dernotrat," a state.: meat of the receipts' land expenditures of the county fur the Year 1 1 1 846. It nppearS:that the total amount ,Of receipts is $6,883 42 ;.; the entire amount of expenditures $6,871 SO ; leaving in yhe treasury _the; full and exact sum of $ll . 62. A very close calculation this !fr.--" reining. pretty near Ito shore," it may be stud. We will refer to a few items of expenditure found', on the list, of a sotui what extraordinary Character : " Alottio Williams,late co,mtn'r, , $139 50 " Ismie Reckhow, :169 50 ".Judas Carter, , do-:; 162 00 is .. - $471° , 00 Look back a few years, compare this ac. , corunt with what . ssas, received , :by. former commissioners per yenr,• midi; will be dis °Covered that since those officersbave assum ed to regulate the pelities .0 the county, as an additional duty, it has cost the tax-pay ers nearly double ;o compensate them :for their services. „ .. .. ~ IL J. Niven,_Clerk, . •$275, 00." Little enough considering that be is become, ez officio, political . s pribe and ,letter writer generali,•zsimo of the Flire-prnof faction. • " N.. C. Warner, Sheriff, •$407.87." A clever sum this ! IncSa of . it was probably incurred by conveying i convicts to the P..eri 7: tentiarv. t • . . "F. B..Streeter,•coansel, : $2O • 00.7, . Formerly, good counsel waeionly : paid 41p. The other live may 11110 been.:added,forpo laical advice: . ' ' . ~':-, i • .1 " E. Puller, crier,; $613, This Inuit have been-;for kindfing - fires( in. winter, opening Ilfidi r atljonrging , .the court, at all Limas , when there: 1 -.. • b. W. Crockeri Jailor, ; •-;.5143 66.' This must be for waiting upon company . in the hack ions'''. , . , . _ " ofticOs, fire pro . pf, : - i. 533,70.7_ ' 7 67.7 . . . . . ~ Stationa'ry, . : 1- 25 . 61.", We do riot comprehend all-these items, tfio' fully aware that the Fire-prbof offices have become ; eximordionrily expensive.. to the People,; whatever the Clique !nay think of it. "Printing, j . ::.,$230 381 „ A liberal item this, Whereivith.toeneoUrage .: the sadly frightened, editors; of the Clique • Organ. The whole. :printijig could . have , been done for half theonono , ,---and as proof. of ou r. . sincerity, we :;tv ill : . give -bonds ;with.: good ,niiti i sufficient surety to p.erforte„the same aMount of printing, the current year, for just blill the sum paid. t4tfie Fire,proor Organ during the past yeor ;.:and,in it style. better than they ever did it. ~r, ... . c r; . "Jair", ' i I ..,I::i.,llfP. 'al. ° , Haw this was a pplied, ; tive, : ctipppi , c o nceive.,. We do know, boweiler t ;Jhut.tbe Jail, has. not. only 'been condeml .PyAtii .iraint ./gry.: t 3 but is, and for a lon time - ha been, cxeefiP 'ugly out pf repair, and otherwise tiofit, - ; foe, the reception of 0ny i ,4 434 ,,44,g;'4,6„ever i , critriiiiil: It cannot; ' yp,iWi t it,Aave k beeq, • i repa i red. " Auuhtur's fees,'euaiiirig.decoente: ” 1 - ,, , .. Merry. Thoincis, poc,l4 o rwl , $ 10,41 1. , ' " Lorin T. Farrar, -i.„: : - ., .,-..1-!':. ,10,40,ri - . " tra N. Hawley, , J' ~• Si.i', 10 *0 ~:; • ,41 3 1:1 0 o in This is_ore,.we be iere,, an was ever ben. fore received , by env.fe'riner : ;enunty. ,Aut t ors. , Wonder if they. ;Hadtted the:accent*, po/ifical, of the Cammissititiete and *lit• Clerk , ii, the 6 Peraluoj.!_ tI I eo th e y :well. earaeil.ilie :tunouPt XecCived. , —='.- -!* riiiirt-hous44 #lO4 60. II