Page:Vol 5 History of Mexico by H H Bancroft.djvu/624

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ARISTA'S ADMINISTRATION.

duction of duties, and other reforms. At the head of the liberation army, as it was called, he readily took possession of Camargo, and advanced on Matamoros, whose inhabitants were known to favor his plans. Ávalos was not strong enough to resist both the citizens and the invaders; but aware of the motive influencing the former, he offered to purchase their active or passive coöperation by conceding the main point, a reduction in duties and removal of prohibitions.[1] The result was a flood of merchandise from the neighboring republic, to the injury of the revenue and of the manufacturing interests, and midst the outcry and protests of sufferers, notably creditors with assignments on the custom-houses; but the government could not remedy the evil, nor did it consider the step inappropriate under the circumstances. Haste was made to send reënforcements from the lower seaports and adjoining provinces, and to issue a decree of confiscation against any goods that might be introduced by the invaders.[2]

Great was the disappointment and rage of Carbajal on finding his plans forestalled and his weapons turned against himself. He nevertheless laid siege to Matamoros, carried several strongholds, and inflicted no little damage on the buildings; but the garrison managed to regain the positions, and even compel him to retreat on October 30th, after ten days' fighting. The report that reënforcements were approaching hastened their movements.[3] Carbajal reorganized at

    of the constitution, equal senatorial representation for the states, free introduction of provisions on the Rio del Norte frontier for five years, the removal of prohibition, reduction of duties, and greater leniency toward smugglers.

  1. Les négociants, profitant de cette circonstance, introduisirent á Matamoros une quantité de cotonnades américaines, estimée à plusieurs millions de piastres,' says Domenech, Hist. du Mex., ii. 235, who was there at the time. He intimates that Ávalos pocketed large sums for the concession. Id., Journal, 385. Arrangoiz, Méj., ii. 317-18, distorts the case somewhat, in order to charge Arista with complicity in the smuggling. Others accused him of sharing the profits of Ávalos.
  2. Méx., Col. Ley Dec. y Órd., 1850-1, 406-7. Carbajal issued a counterdecree against goods introduced by the government party.
  3. Domenech ridicules the method of fighting. Fully 600 cannon-shots and 30,000 musket-bullets were exchanged with hardly any injury, save to buildings,