TERMS OF T1H3 " AMERICA!." , H. B. MA8SER, t. . ) rniMiu see JOSEPH , EISELY. PaeraisTona. .., . ,' JIT. B. Jtdttr, ,t . Met in CtntrtAlUyl itTiht rear, of Jt, Urn TrfR AMCmC.(tN (t rrabiished every Sst'ut it ai i nu wuuaio per annum 10 os -i.l L-l 1 ! 1 W . J; .1 -J ' ( i ru tui iu Brrf-araaTes ar nam.. No subscriptions received for ten period then it afowra. All communications or letter on usineae relating lo the office, to insure attention, iut be POST. PAID. . , . "Philadelphia Witch and Jewelry Store," io. 96 North 8ECOND street, corner of Quarry. GOLD Lever Welch, full jewelled, IS cerate ises, J 48 00 8tler Later Wtchre, full 1 jewelled, Silver Lever Wstchee, ss S3 00 19 00 ven jewel, . . Leuine Watch e. jewelled, finest quality, 14 00 uperior Qusrtirr Watches, : '. , 10 00 minion Quartier Wetche,not warranted, S 00 old Sprctsrle, 00 ine Silver Spectacle, 1 1 7fl old Urao Iota with topal atone, t 60 ulie' GolJ Pencil, 16 carat, , S 00 (old Pinter King 37 ct to $ 9 ; YVa'ch Glas , plain, 13) cts; patent, 18 J Lunet. 35. O er article in proportion. All gnoda warranted l whet they are sold for. O. CONRAD. t n hand, aome Gold end Silver Levera, Lepine d Quartiere, lower then the above price. Philadelphia Dee. ft. 184B. ly Boot & Shoe ISTABLISHIYIENT. DANIEL DRUCKEMILLER, hi Old Eitablithnenl, in Market Street, , . , . . Sunlmry, . (OPPOSITE TUB RED LION HOTEL,) ) ETURN8 hia thank for pt ftvor, end re pecifully inform hi friends and the public rrally, that he continue lo manufacture to or in the n'eateat and latent strlo. CHEAP MOOTS A NO SHOES, ranted of the tieet material, end made by the t eipeticnred workmen. He aUn keep on d a general assortment of faahionalde Bitot for il- men, together with e large stuck of f.iahion centleincn's.bo.v, la. lip' and rhildien' Shoe, f which have been made under bi own imme ! inc1iou, and are of the beat material end tmiruhip, which he will aetl l.iw for cah. i ajdition to the atove, he ha jurt received l'hitadilphia larce and extentve supply of a, Khoea, Ac. of all descriptions, which he lo for cs.h, cheeper than ever before oft-red in place. He respectfully invite hi old citato , and others, to call and ei amine for them . 'pairing done with ursine and despatch. ,' inbory, August 16th, 1846. I NPOR T A W T TO ALL COUNTRY OUSEKEEFERS. .YOU mat be sure of oht-ining, at all time, pure and highly flavored the aingle pound or larger qnai tity, the .InTcaCompany'i Warctaoum, uin txamtt ttrttt, brlwttn Market and C Ara ms treet, PHXI.ABBX.PnXA. retpfore it h been very difficult, indeed, aU impoeaible. alway to olxatn good Gre. n and Team - Bui now veu have wtdy to viit iba Tea Company' Store, to obtain a dalirioa agrant Tea a you could wih for. All tat-le etc le cuited. with the advantage of getting irticle at a low price. ' ie?7lh. 1846. . , PI A N () 8. E SUBSCRIBER h h-ert appointed egent, or tfe ale f CONR AD MEYER'S CEL TED PREMIUM ROSE WOOD PI- S, at thi place. Tbee Pianna have plain. ve ami brauiiful eiteiior finish, and, lor depth weelnea of tone, and elegnee of workman, ire not am paed by any in the Uuiied Btatea. following: i a recommendation, fiom Cai i, a celtbrvted perbtmer, and himaclf a man tert A CAKD. vtwo had the pleaoore of trying the excel- iano Forte ruanfaetured by Mr. Meyer, and ted at the hut exhibition of the Fr-nklin In. , I feel il due to the true merit of the maker lare that these inatrumrnt are quite equal eom respect even upetior, to all the Pi. Gotten, I a aw at the capital of Eoioue, and a aoiourn ef two tetre at Pari. ae pianos will be oM at the manufacturer' Philadelphia price, if not something lower. ere requested to call and examine for ve, at the redenceof the aubacriber. ' ory, May 17, 1846. H.B.IA8SER 3ountriiler ' IEATHBLOW, puMic will please observe that no Urandreth la are tenuitte, unles the box haa three I. inn it, (the top, the sile and the bottom) tntaining a l.c-einulc algnature or my hand , thus B. B.riBtTH, M. D. These la. t engraved on ateel, beautifully designed, n at ao eipsnae of over 82,000. Therefore as seen that the only thing nrcsaaaty to pro- e medicine in lie partly, i to observe litest ember the top, the side, end the bottom, llowing icapeciive person ere dulf authuri Ihoid sairrTTntin!! nr AamrcT sale ef firandrrt ' Vtgttabk Vmmntd - - tUk. . humberland county i Milton Mickey A nlin. Hunbury H. B. M.wasr. M'Esns- reland cV. Menell. Nortbumteiland Wm. u Georgetown J. A J. Walls. ' CMiotyi Nsw Berliav Bogar eV Win ielinRroe George Gundium. Middle suae 8mith. Beavertowu David Hubler. turgWro. J.May. Mifflinaboi: Menach . Haitleton Daniel Lose. Frsoburg-. . G. Moyer. Lswuburg Welle sY Green, Tibia county l Danville E.. B, Reynold Berwick Shuman A Kittenhoaa, Cat If m u-ao-'l C. O. BrobU. Bloomeburg John R. Jeisey Town Bieei. . Whingtoo IcCay. . Liweatons Belli- -.N"ch, ve that each Agent ha an Engraved Cer yf Ageaey, eonlaining a represnta.tioo af INDRETH'kl Maaetory at 8it tfanf, m which wil also be oeea siact copies of Ifbd "ff w(f wmw. thd B'mndrOM tit se No. I, Noitk aHhetaset M. ...., ,r,..;.;; . Absolute -eqnce in the I majority, the vital principie of! Republic fiom "which Dy lllaiier . Elselr ox TIIK NI7TRITIVR aOALITlRS OP rntBRKtD ROWIXUE. BT ntOrCMOR 40RHOII. t propose to show, in in intelligible manner, that whola meal flour ia rrally mora nouriahinjr e well a more wholesome, than floe white, flour m food (or man. The solid part of the human body conainta, principally, 0f thro eevtral portion : the fat, tho muecle, and the bono. Thesa thrM sub stances tre liable to constant waste in the living body, end therefore mut Iw eonttatitly renewed from the food wo consume containing thece S wbftanceeatmoet ready formed. The plant to the brickmaker. The animal rolnntarily intro duce these brick into hi stomach and then involuntarily through the operation of the myRterioua machinery within picks out these bricks, transport them to the different parts of the body, and build them into their appropriate places. As the milter'at his mill thro-vs into the hopper the unground grain, and forthwith by the involuntary movements of the machinery receives in his severs! nicks the fine Hour, fie seconds, tne middlings, the pollard, and the bran so in human body, by a still more refined separ ation, the fat i extracted and , deposited here, the muscular matter there, and the. bony mate, rial in a third locality, where it can not only be etorcd up, but where its presence is actually at the moment necessary. . 1 Again, the fluid psrta of the body contain the eame subttnnces in a liquid from, on their way to or from the several parts of the body in which they are required. They include also a portion of salt or saline matter which is dissolved in them, as we dissolve common salt in our soup, or Epsom salts in the pleasant draughts with which our doctors delight to vex us. The sa line matter is obtained from the food. ' Now, it is self-evident that food must be the most nourishing which supplies all these ingre dients of the body most abundontly on the wholo or in proportions moat suited to the actual wants of the individual animal lo which it is iven. How stands the rjueation, then, in regard to this point between the brown bread and the white the Aoe flour, and the whole meal of wheat .... The grain of wheat consists oft wn parts with which the miller is familiar.-the inner grain and the skin that covers it The inner gives tba pure white flour , the skin, when separa ted, forms the brsn. The miller cannot entire ly peel of! the akin from his grain, and thus some of it is unavoidably ground up with his flour. By sifting, he separates it more or less completely ; his seconds, middlings, cVc, ow ing their color to the proportion of brown bran that has passed through the sieve along with flour. The whole meal, as it is cslled, of which the so-named brown household bread is made, consists of the entire grain ground up together used a it cornea from the the mill-stones un sifted, snd therefore contsining all the bran. The first white flour, therefore, insy be said to contain no bran, while the whole me1 con tains all that grew naturally upon the grain. What is the composition of these two portions of the seed 1 How much do they respectively contain of the several constituents of the animal body! How much of each ia contained also in the whole grain 1 1. Thtftl. Of thia ingredient a thousand pound of the Whole grain contain S6 lbs Fine Flour, 20 Bran - 60 So that the bran is much richer in fat than the in terior portion of the grain, and the whole grain ground together (whole meal) richer than the finer part of the flour in the proportion of near ly one half, . X. ie mvteviar maurr. j nave had do opportunity ss yet of ascertaining the relative proportions of this ingredient in the brsn and fine flour of the same sample of graia. Nume rous experiments, however, have been made ia my labaratory, to determine these proportions in the fine flour and whole aeed of aeveral va rieties of grain. The general result of these is, that the grain uniformly contain a larger quantity, weight for weight, than tha fine flour extracted Iroin it does. The particular result io the case of wheat and Indian core were as follows. A tboussnd ponndsnfthe whole grain and ef tha fine flour contained of muscular mat ter respectively, ' Whole grei. fine f'owr. Wheat . 2.V5 lb. 130 Iba. , Indian Cora 140 . 110 Of the material out of which the animal mus cle is tote formed, the whole meal orgrain of wheat contains one-Alih more than the finest flour does. For maintaining muscular airenglh, therefore, it most be more valuable man equal proportion. . -T , ..'. H faMirrial nd SaliM nailer, f)f these mineral constituent, as tbei may be CL led, of the enieal body, a thousand poonde of bran, whole aseal and loo floor eoaUia) reepec tM-lj- Brae, . . . 700 lbs, WboJemtal, 70 " Tm twit,, ' ' -90 - . 'i n . . ..." . ...... I k 1 )e- lit .' to ,il j AND SHAMOKIN JOURNAL. Snnbiiry, Northnmberland Co. So tbst in regard to this important part of our food, necessary to all liviog animals but especially to the young who are growing, and to the mother who m givrng milk the whole meal ie three timra more nourishing than the fine floor. Our case is row made out Weight . for weight, the whole grain or meal ia more rich in all these three essential elements oft notri. tive food, then the fine flour . of wheat By those whose only deeire is to sustain their health and strength ly the food they ea, ought not the whole meal to be preferred 1 To children who are rapidly growing, the browner the bread they eat, the more abundant the supply of. tho mate? rials from which their increasing bones and muscles are to be produced. . To the milk-giving mother, the same food, and for a similar rea son, is the most appropriate. . A glance at their mutual relations in regard to the three substances, presented in one view. will show this more clearly. A thousand pounds of esch contain of the three several in gredients the following proportions: Whnle meal. Fine Flour. Mueculsr matter, 150 Iba. 130 lbs. Bone material, 170 00 Fat, 28 20 , Tots I in esch, Tsking the three 454 210 ingredients, therefore, to gether, thn whole meal is one-half more valua ble for fulfilling all the purposes of nutrition than the fine flour and especially is it so in re gard to the feeding of the young, the pregnant, and those who undergo much bodily fatigue. It will not be denied that it ie for a wise pur pose that the Deity has so intimately associated, in the grain, the several substances which are neceary for tho complete nutrition of animal bodies. The sbove considerations show how unwise we are in attempting to undo this natu ral collocation of materials. To please the eye and the palate, we sift out a less generally nu tritive food, snd, to make up for what we hsve removed, experience teaches us to have recourse to animal food of various descriptions. - It is interesting to remark, even in apparent ly trivial things, how all nature is full of com pensating processes. We give our servsnls household breed, while we live on the finest of the wheat ourselves. The mistress ests that which pleases the eye more, the maid what sus tains and nourishes the body belter. But the whole meal ia more wholesome, as well as more nutritive. It is on account of its superior wholesomenese that those who are ex perienced in medicine usually recommend it to our attention. Experience in the lawa of di gest ion brings us back to tho simple admiaf found in tho natural seed. It is not an acciden tal thing that the proportions in which the in gredients of s truly sustaining food lake their placea in the seeds on which we live, should be best fitted at once to promote the health of the sedentary scholsr, and to reinvigorate the strength of the active man when exhausted by bodily labor. Some msy sty that the preceding observa tions are merely theoretical; and may demand the support of actual trial, before they will coo cede that the selection of the most nourishing snd wholesome diet is hereafter to be regulated by the results of chemical analyaia. The de mand ie reasonable in itself, and the ao -called deductions OjV theory are entitled only to the rank of probable conjectures, tillthej have been tested by exact and repeated trials. - But such in this ease have been made; and our theoretical considerations come in only to Confirm the results of previous experiments to explain why these results should have been obtained, and to extend and enforce the practi cal lesson which the results themselves sppear tp inculcate. Thus, from the experiments of Majendie and others, it wss known that animals which in a few weeks died it fed only upon fine flour, lived long upon whole meal bread. The reason ap pears from our analytical investigatiooa. The whole meal contains io large quantity the three forms of matter by which the several parts oflhe body are sustained, or successively renewed. We may feed man long open bread and water only, but unleee we wish to kill him also, we most hsve the apparent cruelty to restrict him to the coarser kinds of breads. The chsrity which supplies bim with fine while loaves in stesd, would tn effect kill bim by a lingering starvation. Again, the pork-grower, who buys bran from tha miliar, wonder st the remarks bis feeding god fattening effect which tbi apparently woody and useless material has upon his animals.- The swrprjse ceases, however, and. the practice is encouraged, and extended to other creatures, whew the researches of the laboratory explain lo him what the food itself contains,' what hia growing eniiaal requires. " : u ! 1 Coot only ss well as comfort follow from an exact acquaintance with the wanta bf oor bodies its their aeveral conditions, and with the compo sition ef the various' articlee of diet which ire J t our ecmajatd. la the presaat ' conditioa ef i s.-.-c i. there t. n. ,pPc.' bat to force, tho Vit.l prlneiple Pa. Saturday, July 34, 184T. the country, thie.economy has become a vifsl question. It ia a kind of Christian dnty in eve ry one to praMise it aa far ae hia meana and hie knowledge enable him. ... '. rerbspsthe whole amount of the economy which would follow the use of whole meal in stesd of fine Hour, may not atrike every one who reede the above observations. The saving arise from two sources. First the amount of husks separated by the miller from the wheat which he grinds, and which ianot sold for human use, varies . very much. I think we do not over-estimate it when we consider it as forming one eiehth of the whole. On this supposition, eight pounds of w best yield seven of flour consumed by man, end one of pollerd end bran which are given to animnls chiefly to poultry and piga. If the whole meal be used, however, eight pounds of flour will bo obtsined, or oight people will he fed j by the same weight ofgrsin which only fed se ven oetoro. Again we have seen that the whole meal is more nutritious so thst the coarser flour will gofsrther than an equal weight of fine. Tf.e numbers at which we arrived, from the results ofaoly sis, show that, tsking all the llirne sus taining elements of the food into consideration, the course is one half more nutritive than the fine. Leaving a wide margin for tho influence of circumstances, let us suppose it oily ono eighth more nutritive, and we ahsll have now nine people nourished equally by the same weight of grain, which, when eaten as fine flour, would support only seven. The wheat of the eovntry in other words, would in thi form go one fourth further than at prettnl. General Taylor.' PsHeoKAt. Afpbar ancc One ot the returned volunteers, who fought under General Taylor at Buena Vista, has furni shed one of our exchanges with the following graphic and minute sketch of the general ma king-tip of the old hero. It is ao well done that a portrait might be painted from reading it: "The hero of Buena Vista, around whose military brow so many chaplets of fsme hsve been thrown, presents in his personal appear ance many of those striking stamps of nature, which msrk the gentlemen and the officer. Of an average medium height being about five feet and nine inches ; he inclinea to a heaviness of frame, snd general well-developed muscular outline, with aome tendency to corpulency ( of square build, he now inclines to stoop; and from the greet equestrian exercise the nature of his lite haa led him necessarily lo undergo, hi inferior extremities sre somewhat bowed. His expansive chest shows him cspsble of undergo ing that vast fatigue through which he has pes scd amid the hammocks snd ,avannaht of Flori da, and the atill more recent fields of Mexico, His fsce is expressive of great determination; yet, stilt so softened by the kindlier feelings of the soul, aa to render the perfect stranger pre possessed in his behslf. His head ia large well developed in the anterior regions, and covered with a moderate quantity of hsir, now tingsd ly the coloring pencil ot time, which he wears par ted on one side, and brushed down. His eye brows are heavy, and extend over the optic or bit ; the eye grey, full of fire, and -expressive when his mental powers are called into play, yet reposing ss if in pleasant quiet, when in or nary. His nose is straight, neither partaking of the true Grecian or Roman order ; hia lips thin, the upper firm, and the lower g'.ightly pro jecting. The outline of his facets oval, the skin wrinkled, and deeply embrowned by the many tropical suns to which he hss been expo sed. Hia manners are frank and socisl,- snd no one ever left his company, without feeling that he had been mingling with a gentleman of the true olden times. He at timra appesrs in deep mediation, and is then not always accesai ble. In hia military diffip'ine he is firm, snd expects all orders emanating from his i flice to be rigidly enforced and observed, tresting hi men not ss helots or slsves, but exercining only hat command which is necessary for lite good of the whole. To the younger officers under bim, he is peeulisrly lenient, often tresting their little fsuit more with a fathers forgivenese, than with tho judgment of a ruler. In bis toilet he doee not imitate the Bu BrumiueW and bind box dandies of the present fashionable epoch, but apparela hia person in unison with his sge, and haa no great predilection for the uniform, lo this, however, he is by rn mean peculiar, for a majority of our regular military gentleman aeldom appear in their externals on duty 5 snd the stations lo which General Tay lor haa been assigned have been in the warm and aunty fWb, rendering the hesvy bl eloth undress coat disagreable to the physical feelings, I hsve generally seen hiin in a pair of grey trowsers, adaib vest, and either a btewa or speckled frock coat, reaching lower, than usoal. He wcara e long black silk necker chief, the knot not looking ae if ho had been torturing himself to arrsageiit before a fuH length mirror: he sometimes wears a' white hat, resembling in ahape those used by cor flat boatman, fend t petrol coramoo soldier '(hoes, I not much polished. ! end immodiete parent of depotim.-J,r.,.. Vol. TIto. 41 Whole Ifo, 353 (ton, Santa A tana's Balat. The N. O National give the following de ecription of he Country residence of this die tinguished Mexican chieftain, on the road from Vera Ctux to the capitol, about twelve miles be yond Cerro Gordo . 'As thie distinguished functionary owns prat ty much the whole country between Vera Crui and Jalaps, he finds it convenient to have two other residences ; but the hacienda near Cerro Gordo was his favorite retreat. Here it wss he lived indignity, previous to the dinstrotts bat tie that lost him hie presidential office and his popularity among his people. It was a hold dragoon Mnjor who, first of onr army, entered the princely ibode ; he gsred with eatonish-.j menl at the surrounding splendor, and had not proceeded far to examine, before the name of rf General Santa Anna met his sight, and inform ed him where he was. The residence wss characterized by a specie of oriental plendor; fourteen large rooms crowded upon each other, filled with costly ottomans, from the walls of whichewere suspended rare worksof art. Every thing had been precipitately abandoned 5 upon centre, tablu in one of the principal saloons lay ati unsealed note, in the writing of the Die- stor. It stated that "he left every thing to the metcy of a generous enemy." The Major peered about aa if he had got into n Arabian enchantment ; he examined atten tively the pictures, and coveted a saddle with costly trappings snd stirrups of gold inlaid with silver; he peeped into a little recess, and his hesrt throbbed there waa a couch for a prin cess, upon ine enjoining ia Dies were scatter ed costly perfumes, and on the floor, aa they had Abandoned two pretty Spanish feet, was a pair of elegantly wrought, yet liny elippere. Thn Major waa a gallant man and an honorable one dragoon aa he was, he could forego the saddle and the stirrups, gold though they were but he wanted a trophy, and he placed the sJippers in his fxeket with a thrill at their feel that would have done honor to a powerful gal vanic battery. Yet his heart smote him, and he plsced the treasures back snd walked into the more exposed parte of the house. He went into the neighboring pounds and viewed the splendid cattle end horses that were luxoria ting at ease when, presently, there dsshed by an aid of Geo. Scott ordering the dragoons to pursue the retreeling Santa Anna. !n an in slant the Major waa mounted, and hia men fol lowed with a yell of delight. A few hours elap sed when he returned to the splendid hacienda. What a change! lite fine cattle had been driven off, the aaddle still remained, but the gold and ailver was gone. The pictures were destroyed snd hung in fragments from their frames; the splendid cushions had been cut asunder, and the mirrors broken into a thousand Irsgnients. So ndt-d an incident in the drama of thia Mexican war." RgLATIVC NlTBITIVB AND DlUEBTIVK QUALI TIES of roon. Id nutritive and digestive q ittlities of tho food we est are mattcra which concern the health of every individual. Vari ous experiments snd snslyses have been made by competent perrons lo determine these points, snd the result of them sppesrs to be aa follows: Whest is the most nutritious of all substan ces, except oil, contsining ninety five parte of nutriment to five of waste niattur. Dry peas, nuts snd barley are nearly as nutritious ss wheat. Garden vege'ablea stand lowest on the list, in asmuch aa they contain, when fresh, a large portion ot water. The quantity of woste mat ter is more than eight tenths of the whole. On ly one fortieth of a cucumber ie capable of being converted into nutriment. The nutritious part ot the different meats varies from one fifth to one eighth of the whole. Veal is the most nutritious; mutton next; then chicken ; then beef; lust pork. Fruits vary between two and three tenths of nutritious matter, and their order ia ss follows, the nutri tious being placed firnt : plumbs, grapes, spri cnls; cherries, peaches, gooseberries, spples, strs wberries, melons. Milk contains less than one tenth of nutritious matter, aa it is mainly cm posed of water. Of all the articles of food, boiled rice is di gested in the shortest time sn hour. As it slso contains eight-tenths of nutritious mstter, it is a valuable aubatance of diet. Tripe and pig'a feet (strange to te ll ) are digeated almoat as rapidly. App'ea, if sweet snd ripe, are next in order. Venu is digested almost as soon aa apples.: Roasted potatoes are digested ie half the time required by the eame vegetables boi led, which occupy three hours snd e heir more than beef or molten. Bread oecopie three hour and a quarter. Stewed oysters and boiled eggs are digested ia three hours and a half an hour more thsn le required by thessmeartielee raw. -Turkey end gooee are converted in two hoars and half-an hour and half sooner thao chicken. ' Roasted veal, pork and sslted beef, oeeepy five boors and hall the longest of all articles of fiod. -.... Ae English paper reeeatly remarked ef the Lnitsd Mstrs: 'Jt is a countiy ws canoot nil' derstand . rttgttesee ceuutry and knit trio iter." "--' ' " rwioK of Anrr.nTutiftG. t square 1 inserriom, . . . , . to 5 1 do t do . . . . 0 74 1 - do 3 do '' I . t 00 . Every eobteq sent Inoertion, . 15 Yearly Advertisements I. ens column, f.25 t half column, ft I, three aqnares, git; two squares, fS ) one square, Half-yearly t ono column, tl. t half column, $ 1 1 1 threa squares, ft two squsres, 5; on square, f 3 60. Advertixements last without directions ss to the length or time they are to be published, will be continued until ordered out,1 and Charged accord I ingly. ,-. -. ' a3Hixteen tines or less mske e square. tTB moat MEXICO. Gen. Soott at Puebla, awaiting Reinforcement No Quorum of the Mexican Congress Mr. Trist with General Bcott Every Ave nue to the Capital Fortified Obstinate Re sistance to Gen. Pillow's Advance His Lose Severe American Prisoners at Liberty in the Capital Improbable Rumors. By the arrival of the cites mer Alabama, the Picayune has direct advieee from the City Mex ico to the morning of the 29ih tilt, and Poeb'a to the 30th. Gen. Scott still remained at Pue bla, awaiting the reinforcements on the rend, under Generals Cadwalader and Pillow. The nowa from tha Capital was indefinite. Gen. Scott a'ates that he bad informed the Mexican Government that Mr. Trist wss with htm snd authorized lo enter into negotistiona of peace. Santa Anna had vainly endeavored to procure a quorum of the member of Congress to consider Genersl Scott's communication. It is supposed that General Scott will hsve to march Into Mexico to secure peace. The censorship of the press prevents the knowledge of what measures of defence are contemplated. Santa Anna was to leave in three dsys from the 30th. It is stated that every avenue to the city ia fortified, but the success of the Americans wss not doubted. Gen. Pillow, it U ssid, had been compelled to contest the road with Guerrilla. pnrties until beyond Cerro Gordo. They took advantage of every defile to arreat his progrees. Hit loss is said to have been severe. The Government of Puebla has been entrus ted to Col. Belton, of the 3d artillery. General Alvarez waa at Alixco on the lltti of June, with 300 cavalry. . The American Star of Puebla eaya there is three month's provisions for tbe troops in the city, and that the fields around supply the ne cessary (oragc. A Mexican had been detected by bis conn trytnen while on the way fiom the capital to Puebla, with drawings of the diflerent fortifica tiona around the capital He was tried and sen tenced to die, bat escaped. The Mexicans used every means to indues our men to desert and then used them shame fully. A party of eight Americana, connected with the army, left Puebla for a hacienda on tbe road to Mexico, to purchase mules, encoun tered party of lancers, and could not escape and were forced to fight them. All the Amer icans were wounded and it ia supposed one kil led. Five are believed to have been taken rri soners. A letter from Mexico lo the Americsn Stsr, ssys the Americsn prisoners were at liberty, fend no one troubles them. Tbe writer sees? Major Guinea daily. The decree ordering the Americana awaje had not been extended to them. It ia believed that they arc re incarcerated at Santiago. Ma jor Gaines and Borland rosy be at liberty, but doubtful as to tho rest. The Prefect of Puebla recently decamped to Alixco, with all the city funds. Perry's expedition to Tobaeco waa entirely successful. A rumor wss current at Vera Cruz on the morning of the 1st, that General Scott had en tered the Capital, and that General Pillow had been captured by the guerrillas. The former isfslse, and no faith is placed in the latter. CccuMBEne. A writer in Blackwood, allu ding lu this vegetsble, says that it was regar ded as a great luxury by Suit. Mihmr.nd II, who cultivated it with bis own hands in the Seraglio Girders, "fl-itvig one day perceived that some of his ctieumberj were missing, he si-nt for his hesd gardener, and informed hi:n that should such s ei- r-Ti-.t'nej occnr i.;vn lie would order his hend tu iio en? rfT. The next dsy three moreeucirm'iors hs'i i-ero stolen, n,iom which the gardener, to save his own h.td, l: cued the pages of his highness of having com mitted the thert. These unhs,py youths were Immediately sent for,-and having all declared themselvee innocent, the enraged Sultip, in or der to discover the culprit, commanded them one after another td bo disembowelled. No thing waa found In the stomach or entrails of the first six victims, but the autopsy of the se venth proved him to hsve been the gttilty one. A HosjkThbvbt. The late Rev. Dr. of a certain town in Maine, ao ecccntrie i but honest minister, waa onee preaching en the practical virtues, aud having abort limn previ ously bought a load ol wood of one of the officers of tbe church, and finding it fall short in mss aura, took thia occasion to spesk tbue plainly on the subject ; "Any man that will aell seven foel of wood for a cord, is no Chriatiso, whether he aita ie the gallery, below. er io the deacou'e seat!- . , , : ' Coco CHAfeACTia. A ervant girl received the following written character from a pert n who meant to compliment her very lnfiiiv: fTbte isto Certify that letble Wier eerie wit us during the Issl half year, and found her a ever respect Credidelle and fret of A'eaiW J tha w II b wsJ ff.". '