4t'11it' . ...i . ctii30 .. ,-.R . 0 . •0bi1-ita.n 64-itlltt [O. A. BUEIII.F;rI., EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR VOL. XVII.---11.; LADIES) SALE. T HE Citizens of Gettysburg and vi cinity are informed that the Ladies design making a sale of a large variety of FANCY ARTICLES, during next week, at. Mr. KUHN'S .l'empe rance House, in Chambersburg street.— As many of'the articles have been prepa red for presonts suitable for the season, the presence of Parents and others is respect fully solicited. REFRESH3IENTS of various kinds will be furnished during the continuance of the Sale. per The Rooms will be opened on Tuesday Evening next, (the 22d inst.) —the sale to continue several days, in cluding Christmas. BAs the proceeds are to be devoted to the use of the English Lutheran Church, it is hoped that a liberal patronage will be extended by the public. g -- J= - Contributions, either in money or articles for sale, will be gratefully neeeDted by the COMM I'ITE E. Gettysburg, Dec. 18, 18.16. 1 t PF:LAIIIIATtaIIt T HE Tenth Anniversary Celebration of the "Berlin Improvement Socie ty," will take place on Monday Evening the 28th inst., in the Lutheran Church, in' East Berlin. Exercises to commence at 6 1-2 o'clock, I'. NI. An address will he delivered by the Rev. Air. HARTMAN, suit able to the occasion. The citizens of the counts', and the friends of Literature in general, arc invited to attend, JOSEPH A. WOLF, \ JOHN ZERNAN, Committee Dec. 18, 1810. TEMPERANCE MASS CONVENTION. rg.IIE Friends of the Temperance Cause - 111 - will assemble in County Mass Meet ing, at the llunterstown Church, on New Years Day, at 10 o'clock, A. tl., to delib erate upon and devise means for the ad,. vancement of their benetieent Reform. The Committee of Arrangements ap pointed by the last County Mass COIIVOII - held in the Ilunterstown Church, in accordance with the duties and powers conferred by their appointment, earnestly call upon each and every Society to take measures to he numerously represented in Convention. The Secretaries are re quested to make full reports of theeon dition of the several Societies, and -al; so to furnish information of the number of persons engaged in the trade, in their bounds, and the eifeets of the wattle upon the health, life, &c. of those engaged in it, in accordance with a resolution passed by the the last Convention. Speeches imw he expected from Rev. M'Ci..tv and other friends of the cause. HUGH M'ILHENY, JOHN F. FELTY, TAUGHINBAUGH, Wll. WRIGHT, I). ArCONAUGHY ISRAEL DIEHL, JOHN NEELY, Commithe of' .Irrangemod. 7'o TE.ICAIERS. APPLICATIONS will he received by the School Directors of the Borough of Gettysburg, until Thursday the 31st of December inst. for the situation of TEAcu- ER OF THP, MALE MOH SCOOOL of the Borough, which will then become vacant by the resignation of Mr. Haupt, the pre sent teacher. The salary is $25 per . month. Persons applying for this situation will have to produce vouchers of their qualifi cations, character. St,c. Applicants will direct their communica tions to the_Secretar• cif the Board. IREINER See y. 11. J. ecomber 11, 18.16 JUST PUBLISHED, CHRISTMAS BOX, 'Forlfie SonsDaughlers of Temper ,.. - , anCC, Gy - of Six Nights with the Wa&liim , ,toniaos, RiMed. Family, Jim Braddock's Pledge, , -..q . 1(,..1 , ,Water Pledge, &c. &c. ' V" IS 'Christmas Temperance Story is ..'.- edicated tb write Sons and Baugh:: ... 00 Temperance," and exhibits the Fes- LVt . eis of Christmas in the same Family, r, 7 - er the different influences of Brandy. line, and Water. -It may be sent by it at a BEng postage, and should be in . t ' a . as a gift book, of every family in the land. It is done up with a splend id embellished Lithographic Cover. Price—Single Copies 371 Cen ts. 3 Copies for ONE DOLLAR. Address, WM. SLOgNAKER, 129 Chesnut St., Philadelphia. Dec. 18, 1848. Groceries and Queensw:►re. TUST received a full supply of Grocer les and Queenswarc. which will be sold low. R. AV: IWSHEIZRY. Nov. 0. Cassinens, end plain and faniiy Cassini - tem can be he had very ?ow at the Cheap titore of . WM, RV ft .1 Nov. I:I VALUABLE PARIC-i Public Sale. rill HE Subscribers will expose to Public Sale on the 26//i day of December next, on the premises, a Plantation con. taming about 218 .ICRES, , On which arc erected a two-story weather .. boarded Dling ' r: - •;• . • wel mis.lt l i ar 0 vv. g 95, 11121!1. vir bin . ill SC:V. MAW Stone .. —_-•_. t Bank Barn, Spring-house, Smoke-house, and other necessary out buildings. There is on the Farm, Apple —I,. • and Peach ` ` ' ORCHARDS, bearing Fruit of the choicest kind, an unfailing Spring of water move- 1 nient to the House, a sufficiency ofMEAD- OW, and about 05 ACRES of 1 WOODLAND, ASIIINGTON's DEPARTURE FROM NEW YORK.—About a year since a friend of ours visiting. the metropolis, spent hour with Mr. Custis at his residence, and heard from him a graphic and eloquent descrip tion of the final departure of Washington from New.. York, The scene has often been-narrated, but it' merest, when coming from tl aye-wit ness. Our friend In ;lied us with a description tat ? ; and although deficient in pence of the narrator, it is f. preser vation. The account -which Mr. Custis gives of the appearance and extent of N. York at. the time, is highly curious and in teresting "We then staid at McComb's House near the battery," said Nlr. Custis, "which is now called Bunker's, and that was near ly the extent of the eompaet part of the city. St. Paul's church was quite out of town, and I used to play on a fine, green common, where the Park theatre now stands. Instead of paved streets in that vicinity, there mere-fenced .fields, in which I could sport as freely as if on my own estate, I could now point to the _spot where Washington: embarked, and_bade his final adieu to his army and.the citizens Of New York, although I am sure it must be entirely changed in appearance during the time which has since elapsed. •It was a point at Whitehall, just off the Battery, and instead of the wharf now bound with stately ships, the shore. was then naked as the waves which murinered on Its banks. i .rosborn ho r th(, niorillog no if ,y ,, .ierday ; it was a clear, cool, bracing day in Decem ber, and as the General left the house, ho • ; took my baud, and I though t I never saw him look so sad. We arrived at the :T -at" V. 11. /. - --- , ; pointed place of departure—l see the spot OCT%til - MNT4Z , , Q 0N`V . 1 4 ";,' , 2/...5 2 ! He lay in the last agony of death upon . plainly before ine—the crowd was im "" ' a pallet of straw, surrounded by a ragged ' men se, the army being drawn up in lines ._.__ 0 IHE subscriber will keep constantlymiserable groupof beings,soon to he .1 • . faced and ...m lic h the Generalaspassed on . ; left to the bitter late that awaits them. It is on hand a supply of the them ; the eyes of the multitude were stead-, a painful sight to behold a fellow creature ( d.. y bent upon him, but not a whisper a- Best k Freshest Oysters , who was designed for the best and noblest ( mow _ ; g the. whole was audible. When! that the market can afford—which lie will : purposes, rushing into eternity with the ' IWashington arrived at the spot, he paused. serve up to his customers in the best style, . consciousness of having disgraced the im- , and for a moment surveyed the scene. I either roasted, stewed, or fried. age of the great Creator of the Universe. saw his heart was too full for utterance, Tftlle has an apartment fitted up for 1 The approach of death, in - the progress' : an d hi s eyes seemed bursting with sup the accommodation of LADIES, who may ;of events, and under ordinary circumstan- ( p r essed tears ; still, lie calmly looked on feel .a desire to partake of Oysters—to ces, is palling in its tendency and solemn , all around ; but it could not be long thus. whom every attention will be paid. ; Nature was length in its bearings. In taking our departure was at supreMe—the Gen- ! Or' FA MIMES can be accommodated ; from this transitory existence, after ma- 1 ° oral hastily approached one of the officers 1 with Oysters by the gallon, quart or pint,': king our peace with that Almighty Being , who was standing with several of the stalll n the shortest notice and most favorable . into whose presence we are to appear, a near him, and falling on his neck, gave ; terms. JACOB KUHN. i serenity and calmness might pervade the • way to his feelings in a flood of tears. He ! Dec. .1, 18 16.—tf 1 the dying couch, to exercise their cheerful ( then embraced each of his officers sepa-! ~ ; influence, preparatory to entering upon a rately, with an almost convulsive grasp; new and untried state of action—but b how ; ; and as he thus bade his long loved and loy , different the last moments of the drunkard ing companions adieu, the tears each mo in gliding through the world, with curses ment seemed to start afresh. Not a word upon those lips that ......... . must soon seal ! was yet spoken, the sigh or sob alone forever. Behold him no w.--his lamp of ( broke the silet& of the solemn scene.— life is flickering in its socket, and his grave ;A t length, when the last officer had been openina,to.receive his emaciated form.— , embraced, the General seemed for a me- Beside him stands a care-worn and sor- : ment to gain a self-possession, and with a row-stricken woman, who, through long q firm step turned towards the boat in wait. years of abject wretchedness, has lavished , i n - ; g he stepped on board, and almost her unquenchable love upon that miserable sunk upon the seat; it was but for an ( in outcast, and struggles to prolong his mis- ' stant, for as the boat shoved off, he stood spent days; but all her efforts will be of upright, and quickly raising his hat with no avail, for ere the rising of the morrow's that grace and dignity which seemed peen sun, that heart which should have throbbed.' liarly to belong to him, he surveyed once for the welfare of that devoted wife, will . more his officers, his army, and his friends, have ceased its fluttering, and that hand', and after pausing a moment, he murmered which should have grasped hers in friend-; with emphasis I can never forget, so full ship will lie motionless in the tomb. And l of mingled sorrow and affection, so dee p when the confines of the grave encircle ! and earnest, so soul-felt in its accents, the I within its limits that mortal part which the single word 'FAREWELL !' and waving his devouring flame of rum hath partially con hat, the fresh gushing tears prevented his sumed, who beside that forgiving woman further action or utterance. At that mo and those helpless little ones will shed a acid a shout, such as I never heard before tear of pity at-his early fate? Who but nor since—one simultaneous shout burst they will plant a flower upon his unhonor- I from the shore, and so loud, and deep, and ed resting place, to spring film. and flourish , full was it, that it droWnerthe echo of the as an emblem of affection ? In contempla- , heavy guns—the large twenty-eight poun ting the life of the djing drunkard, ' dors, which at the same moment were •fi thought s of the most painful nature natural- ! red from a short distance aboVe ; a dull ly spring up in the imagination upon re- I heavy noise was all I could distinguish ; viewing his-past history. The question I and as the shout of the multitude was presents itself' to our consideration, what' wafted over the parting waves, and the has occasioned his dowufall ? He set out !cannon's smoke rose upwards, the Gener in life with prospects as flattering as any. !al once more waved his hand, and the boat The time has been,.. when wien he bad fiends, !shot rapidly from the shore. This was fortune, and the favor of the groat. Bles. ; the last time he ever saw New York."— ,sed with the holy Awe of woman,'in the i Watson's .Rnnals of New Fork in the 01. strength of its purity, it is a reasonable ; d en Time. supposition that his life night have flowed 1 on in an uninterrupted stream of bliss, had he not, in an evil and unguarded moment, lifted to his lips the inebriating draught, and fallen a victim to its poisopous effects. And his sorrowful and heart-broken wife, who can summon up her deeds of trial, and recount•lier sufferings ? " Where now are her fancied dreams of bliss? .111! whith er Ituill fled all her cherished kopes of do, mestic happiness? And thosiekpoor little children, what a miserable fate has attend mi them. 'While their mother, on beaded well timbered. The house and other im provements are all good, and the land of fine quality. Tlll4 Farm was formerly the property of GEORGE IRVIN, deceased, who, in his life-time, sold it to his sons, Jon` and GEonoi:, as whose Estate it is now otrered for sale. It is situated in Hatniltonban township, Adams county, about 5 miles from Gettysburg, and is, in all respects, one of the most desirable Farms in the county. i Terms.—One third Of the purchase ;) , Tl' oney to - be paid in hand, on the confirm , ation of the sale ; the residue in three equal i annual payments; without interest. On the payment of the hand money and seen : ring the residue, an indisputable title will be made to the purchaser; . Sale to take place at 1 o'clock, P. M. - - SE icy-Persons desiring to purchase, will - ONN T. 111- NHS. NORTON. be shown the property by Oeo. W. D. Ir- 0 for the dme—the happv, sinless time— ; vin, who resides on the premises. CEO. W. D. IRVIN, 't}loll first we murmured forth our, infantprayer, JAMES COOPER. Listened with reverence to the church-bells' chime, JAMES COOPER is the Administrator Gazed on the sky and deemed that God dwelt there! of John Irvin, dec'd., and is selling the in- No more we hear those holy, deep-toned bells; terest of the,said John (an undivided half,) But as theirecho trembles on the air, in the said premises, by virtue of an order , So in our sorrowing minds remembrance ilwells=‘ - of the Orphan's Court. Breathing of thcise fine days ere passion's sigh, D2c, -1, 18.16 —1 s Remorse and sorrow, (sad the tale she tells,) ' Polluted the - petition sent on high; • La ST Or 0 TIC E. When we knelt sinless, and our God alone rmosE indebted to the estate of DA- i Was in the prayer that rose to his Ahnighty throne, Iyin SnitivEn, deed will call upon . the 501 ,,, . -o, or and pay without delay . . Af ter the Ist day of Januarynext, all claims will be left with proper officers for collec tion. CEO. WILL, E.er. 3t Dee, 1 1, 1815 NEW GOODS! NEW GOODS ! r I 'll E Subscriber hasjust returned from the City with a complete asortment of DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, AND QUEENSWARE, all of which will he sold very low at R. W. M'SIIERRI"S STORE. Ni;,. 6. TO THE LAMM% Ahandsome assort IT BONS, Ladies' 1 SC &RFS, Super G KERCHIEFS, can AV Nov. 6 VEST] NGS. beautiful lot of -Fancy, Silk Velvet, and Satin VESTING'S; also, (lend demen's CRAVATS, SUSPENDERS ; Mohair, Ringgold, Palo Alto, Silk and Common Glazed, Velvet, and Seal-skin CM'S—for sale at • M'SIIEItRY'S STORE. Nov. a. 11/14.1"T . E 11, Two Journeymen Cabmet Makers, by the -subscriber. Immediate ap plication will secure regular employment and good wages during the winter. D. AG I. Gettysburg, Dec. 4, 1846. WM. RUTURAUVE MILL sell FLANNELS, all Wool, and a variety of Colors, for 25 and 31 1-4 cents, Superior Flannels for 37 1-2 and 50 cents. Linseys .and . Plaids, handsome and cheap, and first,rate Ker seys for 12 1-2, Nov. 0. clips! C.H P4 `11,i7 M. RUTURA.UFT has received a handsome assortment of Caps, eousisting of Cloth, (men and boys) Vel vet do. Silk oil do: He also lids Pur Gips much cheaper than usual,' and good Oil ('loth Caps as low isl.s and 37 1.2, . Nt/V. 13. GETTYSBURG, PA,FRIDAY EV,EN6IG, DECEMBER 25, 1-846. nt of BOnnet RIB- Silk and Velvet 41ss Linen HAND )O seen at RUTIIRAUFF'S. POETRY. For the "Star and 7anner." That Maiden Fair.—A, Parody. I love her, I love her; and who shall dare To chide me for loving that maiden fair ? I've trcasur'd her long as a valued prize, I've worsh ipp'd with tears and ador'd her with sighs; She's bound by a thousand bands to my heart— Not a tic will break, not a link will start : Would yc learn the spell? Loveliness was there, And a worahipp'd one is that maiden fair ! In former days I lingered near Her beloved seat with listening ear; And gentle words that maiden would - give, That drew me to her, and taught me to •love. She told me that change would - never betide, With love for my creed and hope for my guide ; And I learned to love my earliest, there, As I sat beside-that maiden fair. I've sat and watched her many a night, When her lips spoke !Ore and her eye grew bright, And I almost worshipp'd her when she smiled And turned upon me those dark eyes so :nib!. Years rolled on, but the lost one sped, My idol wasjoithiess, my earth-star fled ; I learned how much the heart can bear, When I tore my soul from that maiden fair. She's gone ! she's gone ! but I think of her now With quivering breath and throbbing brow ; She loved me—for her I Ivould have died, And memory flows with lava tide. Say it is folly, and deem me weak, While the scalding drops start down my cheek: But I lover her—l love her—and cannot tear My memory from that maiden fair. MI►S'CELLANY. The Dying Drunkard. "FEARLESS AND FREE." knee, and with uplifted hands, has been praying to her heavenly Father for the I sal vation of the soul of their dying parent, they, in the fullness of their sorrow, have fallen asleep, to wake not to a joyful mor- Irow, but to one of increased wretchedness. 1 Now mark the sequel, The drunkard dies in his hovel of 1.4), becomes entomb . ed in the pauper's grave, and his dust a gain mingles with- the earth—his widow i ! yields to the pressure or a broken heart, until the very springs of existence rend a sunder—her children become wanderers through the lanes and avenues of this great commercial eV, and cry in vain for bread' and shelter fr m the keen blasts of a win-, ter's storm. y t rivers of rum will flow on ! in a never-failing tide, to wreck the happi- 1 ness of mankind, SPEIZABO gong B. Gomm, the eloquent — ad-, vocate of the Temperance cause, has en tirely recovered from his late illness, and during the past week has been lecturing with' much success to large audiences in NeW York and Philadelphia. His ad dresses are spoken of as being more deep ly religious than heretofore, and his elo-, queues more powerful., The perfections boasted of by many consist rather in knowing no difierenea between good and evil,—Owen;, A Hero hi Tears. LOVE.—The fol!owing exquisite passage w•e find in Tupper's "Crock of Gold" : "Love is the weapon which Omnipo tence reserved to conquer rebel men when all else had failed. Reapn he parries ; fear he answers blow to blow ; future In. terest he meets,with pleasure ; but love— that sun against whose nelting'beams win ter cannot stand, thaft subduing slum ber which wrestles down the giant—there , r i.- i is not one human creature in - Ilion, not a thousand mon in all eartl 's lark 'quilt . - tillion, whose clay heart is . hardened gainst love." ORIGIN OF THE LIBERTY CAP.—In for mer ages, old age was honorable, and caps became emblems of honor. By degrees, it became the badge of Freedom, for none wore deemed honorable who were not free, and when a slave was made a freeman, he had a cap given him, which he was permit ted to wear in public. The pilns, or car; of liberty, was simple in its form, in the shape of a sugar loaf, broad .at the base and ending in a cord. This prefigures that freedom stands upon the broad basis of hu manity, and runs up to . a pyramid, the. emblem of eternity, to show it ought to last forever. It was simple, for liberty is in itself the most shining ornament of man. It has none of the. gilded trappings that make the livery of despotism. The cap of Liberty was white, the native color of I the undyed, showing that it should be nn-1 tainted by faction or tyranny, In Canonsburg, Pa., on Monday. week last, three young men undertook to drink I liquor on a banter—;-one of them drank a , gamst the other two. First Caine a quart, one, half of which was drank by one of the young men, and the balance equally di vided between the others, So with a sec ond quart of Whiskey. The third was, 'also, delivered ! and when he who had al ready drank one quart, attempted to take the third, he sank, to rise no more! After lingerin g in a state of utter insensibility for I a few hours, the unfortunate you man died: A REPUBLIC IN AFRIcA. - -By papers from the African colonies, the New York Sun has received the proclamation of Gov. Roberts ordering an election, preparatory to the establishment of the Republic of Li beria\as an independent nation. There was not the least doubt of the result of the election; all classes were in favor of assu ming the position of an indepondont nation. The other' colonies will doubtless unite with Liberia, and form a union of African Republics as the United States of dfrica, under one constitutional head, like our own confederation, Remember the Poor, When Providence blesses In basket and store, And conscience confesses Mutt you need nothing more I When Plenty is smiling, With comforts beguiling, All labor and strife— Then think of the needy ! Remember the poor For good ever ready, Drop aid at their door. Wherever another In anguish you find, Speak joy to that brother ! Breathe balm on his mind ! Ills lobk of sad pleasure, The tear and the smile— Repay in full measure, And gladden the while ! FROM MONTEREY. conursroxnEscE OF TUN "STAR AND 11.tIVNEIt. " Camp ; 'tear Monterey, Itlisho. Tho Brazos and the mouth of the Grande are now the principal depots for the recep tion and forwarding of all supplies for the use of the army, to their dependencies. These place's are low, and liable to intin dation, .frdm the heavy gales that frequent ly occur here. Therefore, Point Isabel is still kept up in case such an event should occur, that it may be resorted to. And it is further considered the most suitabb; place of the three, for storing ammunition, clothing, &c., as well as for tho accommo dation of the sick, to which it is now ap propriated. From the mouth of the Rio Grande up to Camargo, a distance of 200 miles and upwards, the country is flat, resembling in that particular the great valley of the Mis sissippi. The river may be said to be the Mississippi in miniature. Boats drawing from 4 to 5 1-2 feet can ascend, nearly or quite the year round, as high as Camar. go. At this point, a depot for the supply of the army in the interior, has been es tablished since July. Few buildings re main standing hero, some 800 having been submerged and completely destroyed by the high water in June. The towns on the river worthy of notice, aad which are now occupied by our troops, are Barreta, Matamoras, Rynoza, and Camargo. The soil is of an alluvial character, and is capa ble of being made very productive, but it strikes me, that the Mexicans are not the! people to make it so. They pay very lit tle attention to the cultivation of their land, breaking it up with their wooden ploughs only two Or three inches deep and casting The core_upon the, earth, kwhick is the staple'of subsistengq onlhp Rio Grande,) as the small graitYA - ii're seivn in the United, States: The country, through 'which the army passed en route from Carnargo Meir, like that of the Rio Grande, is flat and overgrown with sparse bushes mostly clothed with thorns., In this ehapperal, region we were made acquainted with the TERMS-aWO DOLLARR PEU AN9TDI. .IWHOLE 110. 873. utility of the heavy saddle gearing, in such common use in northern Mexico, hereto• fore unintelligible to many of us, having the effect of the ancient greaves. Our torn apparel, by slight deviations from the road, to avpid the dust, or for some other cause, proved the necessity of such an ar., rangement, Meir is situated on the, Alamo, 40 miles' from Camargo, population about 4000, and' has fir its foundation a solid rock. The' buildings are generally stone, and built for defence against invasion, as indeed are all the towns that I have seen, Whilst hero' I visited a school of 150 boys, which is said to be conducted on the Laneasterian principle. Whether it he that system or not, lam not able to say. They appear,. ed to be busily engaged in getting their lessons, and kept up a continual chattering, front which I eqpcluded it was any thing else titan a good system. As soon as we left the neighborhood of Meir, the character of the country' chang, ed from the extreme flatness of the valley' of the Rio Grande, to great boldness of un dulation. The prospect became extensive and beautiful—sometimes sublime, as ram, ifications of the Sierra Madre are almost constantly in view. But the country can be called nothing else than an irreclaimable desert, save here and there a spot contiguous to water.cour, ses. After passing several places of im portance, we reac hed Seralvo, 65 miles from Camargo. This' town may have once contained 5000 inhabitants, but at this time few were seen in it, as well as all other towns on . our route hitherward , they having been obliged, by . force of arms, to retire to Monterey, or ,some other place. We remained here three days to recruit, and make arrangements to move forward with an additional force, the Regular Troops having advanced to this point under command of General Worth, several weeks previous to the arrival of Headquarters, Before the departure of _ Gen. Taylor and Staff from Seralvo, Maj. Geri. Butler's command, (the 3d division) came up, The three divisions moved oft' from this place alternately, one day in ad, vance of each other. On the arrival of the Ist division at Marin, 100 miles 5, S: from Camargo, and 25 miles north of Mon, terey, another halt was made, until all the forces reached that place. The sight occupied by Marin Is sup. posed to be 1900 or 9000 beet above the ley, el of the sea, it is the most prominent place through• which the army marched on its route to Monterey, overlooking the surrounding country, and particularly to . the S. W., as far as the mountain pass to Saltillo. Some of our spy-glass gentle.. men occupied the belfry of the church,' at times during our stay here, but the at mosphere continued so dense that their" discoveries did not amount to much.— 'Here, as well as at all encampments of our • army, Mexicans came in to dispose of their few articles of marketing. Glad to be thus accommodated, we have invariably paid them liberally for every thing they bring into Camp. At the appointed time, the three Divi. sions moved off in the following order, at 6 o'clock, A. me., the Ist Division; at 7 o'- clock, A. at., the 2d Division ; and at 9 clock, A. at., the 3d Division ; extending from front to roar, near nine miles. At 10 o'clock, A. at. on the 19th ult. the advance guard, consisting of two compan ies of Texan rangers, marched in site of Monterey ; it could not be seen to, ad van. ' tag() until they g ot in range of the enemy's' heavy cannon, being situated in a gorge of some of the loftiest peaks (shaped like a sugar loaf) of the Sierra Madre. Six or eight guns were fired from the Citadel, and one of the enemy's battarica, ' hut the guard sustained no injury. After' `looking at the place a little while, and hear. ing the music• of the heavy artillery, let loose upon those charged with the recet, noitering duties of the place, and finding' the enemy strongly fortified, Gen, Tavlor directed that the neighboring grounds be examined, for the purpose of finding a suitable place, as near the scene 'of , action . as possible, for encamping his whole coat. mand. The . execution of' this order oc cupied but a short time, when the -army - ! in advance, and that in the rear as it camp up, filed off to the right and left of the road into a beautiful grove (of live oak, pecan. and other trees) exten d ing, along a small stream of water formed by Various springs in the vicinity, some six miles, with grad. nay elevating banks on. either side,i.of it. Maj. Mansfield, of the Engineers, with . a suitable escort of Dragoons and Texan Rangers, was directed, with other officers of his Corps, to continue the reconnoiter, ing, commenced on the 19th, during • the 20th, thereby giving Gen. Worth time to proceed, with the 2d Division, and gain a . position on the Saltillo road, which would enable him to commence an attack on the heights by dawn of day on the 21st. Gen, Worth gained his position and kept It, but was, unable to engage the enemy as soon as was contemplated, having enconntered difficulties which he did not anticipate,—'•'• However, at 10 o'clock, A. at., ho 'corn - menced the work, whilst the let and A c t ,___Di,asions made a strong diversion* ititt 'T4vor nearly at the same tier On the left of. the i.Own, - the result of which you _ learned ere this, as well as the poems of the 2d DiVision. - The CommandOr of dist Division should be a Major Geeet!atit th# Army, instead of Brevet 13i1eit444 General. So sity'his . friendi hire ? 441 believe his enemies-toe,