i . i , t : M 4.1 - - . d " i .. ' i ! ' .4, - -ii - m . r- . ?. , . . : : ' , . . . T .Si I r" i el j:.,k. Tro D0i4.i peranum 1CI' r J. ' ..U ii ftl tor caviare far tuenrsi. ?,Pm.?r. "17 - rt 0r. ri ' i ' Fr" Hie -we; OF BUENA VISA. t Lil ' I , .-r 11 ' Orf ins De!t f March 27, U Ud tke WmiI of an interviewer ster, ?V iit-s fJ'iha Arrnr.whobroucht Xt ion; olr lhVftinji.ed General who ff brmreij on1 jle Plains of Chalmette. iJ& , Uui ofcr Wiles,; by tbe side of tbe 2JL? J.ckkonViiHea at tbe Aid ol Gen. & in te iIooty fgbt it Buena Vista first stent Ur made his uB l"r p"'"!" f J t v ,J st liufna!YiU. His movement toward I i iit nueva a r vvj iuu wjiflflpto they'd Which .he had selected for t Vbukgwrtdi! At Jsooa as McCulloch's t'ei wkiwere .invalMbje as scouts, informed- IJ'of AnV f (,Proa lo Agua Nueva, LvitlTayKrr qUeW wruke up his camp,'and iUck lo his jfirsflo , Bujsna Vista. This Cition Was idtnirabfjj chosen. It was at tbe IJ of a mountain, or! father jof two mountains H'ea; hich ( tin e roid through a nar ' jt rallef,. On his right there was adeep'ra- .wfcwn'proieciea inai nana more eueciuai. t ikm half a dtzen regiments could have done, fbi cl K (Jco.jTajflor'a line rested on the Lof'almounUin. re ijoad in the centre .. trenched 'and difended by a strong bat. ,J An Jfront the ground was uneven, bro i J inta hill aod Ue ravines, well adapted wqUf,itjnieerf andyi its peculiarities sup. Oa tN 21 kiltie enemy were uscnea ap acting over the distal hills. At their ap- iheUrMuhteect; raised a great shout h ree tremendous cheers. Their en. nMfi iand papers' Wre: seen flying uver the 3t!J in4 jfrsgiiny: thjilr! cannon about to get 31 jnlp pwiuon jj; uui ine nature oi ino grouna U p'bt Vor tfeb Jidde taking, and -it was late uttedaw befvre be ijigiguns began to open. !. WWcaljberTheir fire, though kept up trrilruklT, and apparenily!; well manned, did wlttle eleculMu ii our ranks that it was not ctniijeteJ lietfeMiry U return it. Our cannoa t(r tbert(o;i! silent ho whole of the 22d. E or (f n Kilco: anuT wounded were tbe ex. ttt tf tbicaiuilties sustained by our army on tufiii JDuring the (jay an otlicer approach, eiwr !ini wita a flag'of truce, and requested ab, iiorn ujllin. jraylori The brave old sail vat iltiini quietly on his old white char. rr, wilhf his leg over the pommel of the saddle,' tiWing be tn9Vincnis jut trie enemy, when k Meiic in olHclr Wis presented. In a very ouricoui iml graceful jmaniier the oflicer stii. jiitli( kid jheenlserit by his excellency i. daota Anna to his excellency uen. 1 ay. in he tnost respectful manner, tune iven. i javiorrwas waning lur. ?4n Trior's batteries,' and the f.nmanncr u wnicnine receivea oauia A a u'lSfrrificcanupnadink the Mexican supposed a very pertinent question, lo m u ifclit: Ui, hojvev'e, bid lougli and Jteady gave Vjrery 'perWuejii rely that ' he was only iiPf (of Santa Anna to surrender.' This proved to he ti riise to ascertain where iUvfors position! was t lor, after the re- fcf ihe Meiicanoflker to his own ranks. (Mexican batiery seemed to open up. iljepJ'lajlorfs 'posit ion, and the balls flew wet MsJmhjI; )ike bajf. Utterly indiirerent lo iptfrUtf Ills situation, there sat the old chief fctcoDipicuous whii horse, peeling through w ipy-gliiss 'at the long lines of Mexican fjbit couM be seeii at a grout distance oh 51 !' ! eruasion of bis aids could wduce'htin to abandon his favorable point jnerratiiunj nor tjilgive up his old white Wkj Ttflhejsuggeion his staff that old ai!fT was rather loo eonanit'tiotis a charier for j-cwnmiiiderj he replied that the old lellow iniited : the ; hiii at Monterey on account ol peffooU and he was determined he should Mhre this time.!! AtimrUej on iallrnest. JL Mill!' ; -Uiili uo Jul -.j Jr v 1 ; A m ri- w k: m , ' It . T 1 ' 1 ii I ! - . i - - - ; 1 ; y y:- 1 ; - . h - - . ;'.--' -!-;'..'.'- .P .. i :. i 41 I UUUNE.R & JAMES, Editor 4 Proprietors. Kl A CHECK TPOX ALL. YOU IS, SAFE.' IpTm,AXD LlEEKTT Gen'l. Ilarrhon. NEW SERIES NUMBER 50. OP VOLUME SAIilSBURY ! he 23J February the battle i 'in1! t . i ne mexicans were drawn columns uld view iSiimijieDie number. The dark colurr f njnjry eitfnded as far as the eye co 't'M M cavalry jo cover the whole vi ,llWr bierinitial.ll bailie: Infantry and cavalry, their big guiis, !yt pM?Cted by a large artillery lorce, i? wv jnceani annonado 1 against our t-,m,ie! foes were soon in motion. uit,ry was Fcted the thrown forward to meet thpm j volunteers; General Wool Jf in person, and was seen 7 tejrii rallying andj encouraging the vol. JwU' i 0 wero oon engaged !coj3ict Tjje trten nature of the ground f?iN forces; so that, instead of one gen. pgrhchtj the1 regiments werelcbmiivll.1 if.Sc nieasuf to light on their own rlijonicers were always in the advance .;thfir tfoops j hence the great mortal., ng lhcm. In tUis general melee, one of STi rf8,"1Cll, f 400! men would bo at. severai Sf H$ lho' Kfntiicky infantry was PM M He footj ol L lull, ! in a deep ravine, 1ne(nif force f the enemy. A large rafihttvrtiwere killed here : amontr SIP? WMcCeH" who Ml badly wound" f Ik 1 Hdiattly dispatched by the ene. vWI1?Pjcfced himvith their bayonets as he TI'. tbt 'rAji;ii r .... rVl rl ..-.it . 'lis tbish. and beinr uns.b e lo ws k .!.. . 1 i i t ; : - 6 'I foe n. but awin? to the steennesa nf 1 Colonel Harden led the lllinoisans in very handsome style, and the sturdy "suckert" fought like lions. Their intrepid polonel fell wounded and experienced the fate i of Colonels McKee and Clay, and was killed by tbe enemy not howevef, before he had killed of the cowardly miscreants with a pistol, which he fired whilst lying on the ground. j Col. Yell led, the foremost man, a charge of mounted volunteers, against a large body of lan. cer, and was killed by a. lance, which entered his mouth and tore off one side of his face, 1 The Mississippian$, theheroes of Monterey, after doing hard duty as skirmishers, were or. dcLrMi,t 'Kf,1 charge of cavalry which they did pith their rifles, delivering at the same time ;a most destructive fire ain'ong the crowded columns of cavalry. The cnem? were completely repulsed. The distinguished commander of this gallant regiment, Col. Jtf. hjrson Davis was badly Wounded, an estopette ball having entered bis foot and passed out: of his leg, He was, however, doing well when last heard froni The chivalrous Lieut. Col. McClung wis prevented from doing his share of the. brave deeds of this brilliant light by the grievous wound received it tbe battle of Mon. terey, which stil confined him to his bed, and from which U Is much feared by his best friends he will Jievetj recover. ) ' j Col. Humphrey Marshall's snlend Iff rin!miin of Kentuckyjcarulry were impatient fer an p. porlunity ofMhoSving their mettle and avenging iue capiure 01 ineir urethren, then in the hands of the enemy. jThey were soon favored with the desired 'opportunity by the approach of I a force of more than two thousand lancers and hu&sars, who gallantly charged them. The Ken. tuckians stood jtheirgrdund with immovable steadiness, and, receiving the enemy with a fire from their carbines, charged in the most gal. lant style through the column oil the right, and, wheeling, fell on their left, dispersing and kill, ing a great many of them. A like charge was made by Colonel May at the head of a squad, ron of dragoons, and one of Arkansas cavalry, against a large body of the enemy's cavalry with like results. j j During the engagement on the night, Santa Anr.a, seeing that Gen. T's force was not well protected on the left flank, sent a large force of cavalry around that point; and, out flanking Tay. lor, succeeded in throwing 2,000 men into bis rear. IJutGen. T. immediately sent Captj Bragg with his artillery, against this force, who sue ceeded in culling them ojfffrom the main body. Lieut. Crittenden was dispatched, with a Rig of truce, to demand the ilmmediate surrender of this force. The Mexicjan officer, pretending not to understand the character of his minion,' insisted that he should be blindfold according to the riiles of war, and thus had the Lieutenant carried into the camp oft Santa Anna himself. This was a ruse to get jtime to Extricate the Mexican cavalry from their dangerous posi. tion, and peridjjng this truce they were all drawn off by a different road from that by which they had gained thjs position, j h Lieut. Crittenden was conducted blindfolded to the tent Of the j Mexican General.iniChnsf, which he found a long distance from the sceue of action, and Which he thought the safest place he had been, in during the whole day. As he approached Santa Anna's tent he was greeted with a most tremendou flourish of trumpejs, which might have been heard a mile . off, but produced no very great terror in the mind of th Kentiifkan. His blind was taken off, and n Tk;m 'j i" o u tj oiiucuii to car rRito1 vn,??:tlii! Mp young officer he was 'SrLr fighting with his sword the (J? werf Ebbing him with their bay. 4 ?S? meo, " nead of lhe company h,i:Jn l,,art sorji, who fought at his side, feynded, bu ftill clontinued the fight, :u f! ovfcomrfwiih!fhe loss ol blood. ff40 time the Indiana brigade, who iit 'and!0Mere charge the eri S k.! wilh) a Pw anddisplaying li0i Assiitant Adjutant General Hnla1- d-il0 lMif front tt'd, whilst up. NSSfP1. e'f cowirdice, was shot-f HwiWafftB-lhrougi his body. In jus n-.rf'S? H should be stated that they Srrrit dt H fully , redeemed 4heir .7. WW gallant and effective ill 1 i. e .i i .j' i tp ... . f -... - ue lounu uiuiseii in me presence ol tne lamous Mexican Chief, surrounded by a brilliant stafl of bedizzened, gilded, and mustached officers. Santa Anna apologized to llus Lieutenant for the act of his officer in having hirrblindfiddcd, saying that, so far from having any desire lo conceal his situation, he was desiring of exhibi. ting to Gen,p Taylor the utter folly of resisting so powerful tin army as he had under bis com. mand. To Avhich the Lieutenant replied that his simple message was to demand his Santa Anna's immediate surrender to Gen. '1'aylor. When this extraordinary demand was transla ted to the Mexican, he raised his hands and eyebrows in utter astonishment at the temerity and presumption of such a message, and replied that he would expect Geii. Taylor toTsurrender in an hour, jorf he would destroy all his forces. Lieut. Crittenden's reply, which we have al. ready given" Gen. Taylor never surrenders J" terminated the interview, and the battle re commenced and was continued until1 night. Santa Anna took three small pieces of our artillery, which, under Lieut. O'Brien, had been posted too far in advance to be covered by oiir infantry. All the gunners were 'shot down, and when the guns were captured there was not a soldier left to man them. One ofLthese pieces was an old Texaij 6-pounder, which, du ring the Texan revolution, had done good exe cution amongjhe Mexican ranks. As to the flags he boists of having taken, they are very probably mere company markers, which were dropped on the field and picked up by the valiant Mexicans. His excellency of the War Depart, ment, to whom Santa Anna has sent these tro phies, will no doubt be sorely disappointed in the size, texture, and beauty of these standards. Mexican pride is easily satisfied when such feeble mementoes of their prowess find valor as these console them for so inglorious a de feat. Mr S; All the officers on our side, in this hard, fought battle, ? distinguished themselves. The details of the battle were confided to General Wool, who nobly justified the confidence of his commander and brother-veteran, by the most active, zealous, efficient, and gallant conduct. Throughout the whole action he was constant, ly engaged in the disposition of our forces, and in rallying them to the onset. It was a mira cle that he escaped the thjick-flying balls which thined the ranks he was i marshalling. There was but one complaint made against him, and that was, that lie exposed himself too much. Brig. Gen. Lane also showed himself to be1 a brave and capable office r. Although wounded early in the actibn, he kept his horse until it closed, and never for a moment left his post J ' The old General-in-Chief remained at his original abd much-exposed position, superin tending the battle and narrowly watching its e. vents.: An escopette ball passed through; his overcoat thai same old brown, so familiar Uo all the officers and men who have ever beeni under his command, and which has seen sever al campaigns in florida, in Texas, and in Mex icq. , ,tj . j . ! ; JOn the night of the 23d both armies 'drew ofjfrom the field of battle. Our men were en. gged all night in bringing in the wounded and taking care of them the Mexicans as well as their own men. .There Were, however, but Jj of our men found on the field wounded Tjhey were, to use Santa Anna' significant wjrds in his dispatch, "all dead" the cpw arly miscreants having killed eveiy tnjto whom they overtook wounded ind helplesi on the field. With like turpitude and treachery, they left their own dead unburied and their wound, ed uncarcd fbr, on the field where they fell.-4l The latter were carried to Saltillo, in our own wagons ; the former were buried by the alcadel under the orders of Gen. Taylor. ; A number of officers Were taken prisoners; an exchange was effected, by which all our men who are now in their hands were released. Cassius M. Clay's party are understood now lo be in the city of Mexico. " : , Am6ng the killed and wounded of the Mexi cans are three general officers and twenty colo. nels and commanders of battalions, General Minon, it appears, has not as vet realized the brilliant career of which he considered bis cap. lure of Major Borland an earnest. He was or dered by Santa Anna to attack and carry Sal. tillo during the engagement at Buena Vista. i yVjih this object, he made a demonstration a gainst the town With 2,000 cavalry. Lieuten. aqrShoyer, with sixty men and two small pieces of artillery, Went nut to meet the valiant Gen. , eral, and, at one discharge of his cannon, sent him and his large force to the right j about in dquble.qiiick time. In concluding our necessarily imperfect sketch of the few details of the brilliant deeds of A. merican valor performed at Buena Vsta de.i tails gathered from a hasty conversation we' must be allowed to express our satisfaction to fiid that the anticipations We have so confident.: and so frequently expressed of the bravery and efficiency of our volunteers have been more than realized. Let ihose who have heretofore made our citizeriisoldiers the theme of theirj ribaldry and ridicule be ferever hushed into silence by the unparalleled gallantry and glory which have consecrated in American history the bloody field of Buena Vista. From the New Orleans Picayune, March 27. j THE KENTUCKY REGIMENT. An incident at the battle of Buena Vista. At a very critical point of the battle on the 22d, when it became necessary to sustain one of our columns, which ! Was staggering under a charge made by the Mexicans in overwhelming numbers, Gen. Taylor despatched Mr.. Crittenden to order Col. McKee, of the 2d Kentucky" Regiment, to brhig bis men into immediate action. Mr. Crittenden found the regiment, men and officers, eager fpphe fray, delivered the order and rode back to the General, by whose side it was his duty to keep. The Kentuckians moved forward in gallant style, led by Mc Kee and Clay, both of whom alas! fell in a subsequent! part of the day. It so happened that before reaching ap position from which they coujd deliver an effective fire, the regiment had to cross a valley which was broken up by ravines and masses of stones. Whilst crossing this Valley the heads only of the men could be seen from the popnt which Gen. Taylor and Mr. Crittende occupied ! r-and these were bobbing up and down andi crosswise! in such confusion aa to impress both with the! idea that! the regiment had fallen into disorder. The Mexicans! W4re annoying them nt the dame moment by a fire, which! helped to confirm the opinion of the General that thei Kentuckians were thrown into dismay. t It was one of those decisive crises which ocur in ev-l cy contested field, when the issue of the day-depended,1 for the time being, on the gallantry of a particular corps.; Gen. Taylor, who, as before said, could only see thei heads of the troops, and misled by their motion's in get ting across gullies and going around rocks and other ob structions into tire belief that they were about to falter, turned to Mr. Crittenden, who is a KentuckiaLand with ' a countenance indicating deep mortification, fir the Gen eral is a Kentuckian too, and an eye fierce with emotion, exclaimed, " Mr. Crittenden, this will not do this is not!' the way for Kentuckians to behave themselves when called upon to make good a battle it will riot answer Sir," and with this he clenched his teeth and knit his brow and set his teeth hard together. Mr. Crittenden,' wio was mistaken by the same indications that deceived! the Gen'l, could scarcely make a reply from very cha grin and shame. In a lew moments, however, the Keni tuckians had crossed the uneven places, and were seen ascending the slope of the valley, shoulder; lo shoulder arid with the firm and regular step of veterans of a hun dred fields. On they moved until they reached the crest of the hill where they met the enemy before the flush of a temporary advantage had subsided. Here they deliv ered their fire by companies with such regularity and deadly aim that the decimated phalanx of Mexico gav Wy and retreated precipitously. As the Kentuckians emerged from the valley, the countenance of the. old gen eral, who was regarding them with the intensest interest; gradually relaxed the bitterness of its expression. A glow of pride supplanted the deep mortification whicH fixed its muscles and enthusiasm qualified the fierce; glances of his eye. Forward they moved un Jer his rivj eted gaze, whose feelings became more and mc re wrought up as they approached the scene of carnage. Wheij they opened their fire the old general could n longer re strain his admiration, but broke forth with a pud huzza " Huzza for old Kentuck," tie exclaimed, talking as i were to himself and rising in his saddle "iThat's th way to do it," and the tears of exultation rolled down his cheeks as he said it. i Having got ridl of this ebullition of State Drtde he wen I i i ii about looking aftf r other parts of the field. ANECDOTES OF GEN. TAYLOR We copy from the Matamoros Flag of the 20th ultimo; the following interesting items relative to the battle Ot" Buena Vista: ! I Prodigies of valor were performed by both men. uen. wool was seen m every-part o where his presence was mosi required, leading on and ei horting his men. To him this was an important day, a? after events will iihow." Cl. Hardin, of the 1st Illinois regiment distinguished himself particularly. He was struck on the breast with a musket ball, during the hot I Ace. officers and ine neiu, test of the fight and died instantly.' CoL'X Arkansas cavalry1, fell while leading a chargi- of his Ref gifnent. ; iis intrepic His intrepidity on the occasion is s1; ell, of tbe poken of jterms of the highest praise. CsptJ Albert Pike, of the same Regiment, also conducted himself gallantly. Col. ;W. R. McKee of the 24 Kentuckjr Regiment, receiving a mortal wound in the throat, the command devolved on -Lt. Col. H. Clay, son of Henry Clsy. While leading on his men to the charge, he received a severe wound in the leg. Not being able to stand, four of his men at tempted joj carrjj him from the field, j They bad not pro ceeded far before he received a second, and more severe jwund MK niji5o of the.ftmr men were killed. fhewoiiosisted upon carrying him off; heroical ly he, ord lUm tojeave him, and resume their pla ces in th fight; After the battle, be was found pierced quite through the breast with a lance. Adjutant Gen'l Lincoln, on of x-Governor Lincoln, of Massachusetts, was killed whilejrestmig order among the Aarkansas cavalry, who, were thrown into momentary confusion by an ovemhelmirig charge of lancers. His conduct is the theme of extravagant praise. I ;! At the desperate attack on CDry an's battery, when the Indiana brigade wavered and tot tered al along the line, from the force of overwhelming numbers. tix, of the Paymaster", department, snatclied a flag-atatTfrom the hands of its carrier, and rushed tot the front of the brigade, and exhorted the' men to stand firm. lis presence reanimated them, and they redoubled their exertions. Col. Jeff. Davis, the brave. chivalrou, and accomplished commander of the Miss issippi, rjffes, was severely wounded whether on the firat or second day of the fight, is not known. They were thrown forward the first day as skirmishers, a most peril ous dutynd sufficed severely, losing 40 men in killed, and having 110 vounded-a loss, considering the weak ness of the regiment, not over 400 in number, almost un paralleled. The Lt. Colonel of thi. Rfgiment from , wound received jat Monterey, is yet quivering on the verge of (he grate, having been the first to mount the walls at the castellated fort at that battle, and now hi, chief in command is struck down, and his life vibrates in the same uncertain fate. Truly may it be said of this Regiment, it hast performed its duty well. Thousands of the Mexicans after their defeat, fled to the mountains, apd after the lapse of a few days, pre sented themselves to Gen. Taylor as prisoners of war. He told them, in their own language, to ' vamos that he would have nothing to do with them. Two thousand females, who followed the Mexican ar my, remained, like ministering angels, to take care of the wounded; Gen. Taylor treated them with the kindness due to their sex, bind the humanity expected of an Ameri can. . 4 j j Bluchei- and j Wellington-like. General's Wool and Taylor met after the retreat commenced. Gen. Wool rushed between his extended arms, and congratulated him upon the favorable results of the day's toil. Gen. Taylor .playfully) retorted : " O, it's impossible to whip us when we all pull together !" The battery commanded by Capt. Braxton Bragg did terribl execution. The Mexican cavalry made a charge on him; he waited until they were within two hundred yards, whin he Jxoured a terrible fire on them, his pieces charged with market balls. The leading squadrons were mowed down, and they stopped for a moment. Bragg's guns were instantly loaded, and a second discharge, as deadly as the firjst, threw the enemy into confusion, and a third put them completely to flight, leaving the ground covered with men and horses. Only imagine for a mo ment, a battery f cannon charged almost to the muzzle with musket balls and slugs, fired three times into a dense mass of men and horses, at a distance of two hundred yards, and you can form some idea of the terrible slaugh ter! BATTLE OF BUENA VISTA. Through the kindness of a friend, says the Washing ton Union, we have been furnished with the following extracts from a private letter written by Lieutenant Col onel Mansfield, of the corps of engineers, to a brother oflicer in? this city, giving a brief and hastily written de scriptionof the battles of the 22d and 23d of February : Eighteen Mh.es South of Saltillo, 4-t Camp United State Army, Agua Nuera, j ! March 1, 1847. ' Dear Captain : We are just recovering from the fa tigues of a tremendous battle, fought by this little army on the 22d and 23d February at Buena Vista, a place about eleen miles in our rear and seven miles this side of Saltillo. j WeJ had previously been on this very ground from the 6th to the 20th j February, reconnoitering the positions, roads, Ate, and ascertaining where the enemy was, and his numbers. We found Santa Anna was at Encarna cion, thirty miles in our advance, with twenty thousand troops of infantry and artillery, and that on our left was General Minon, at Ediorda, say twenty-five miles off, with three thousand cavalry and lancers. Un the aist, at noon, we broke up our camp, and fell back to a good position at Buena Vista, to await the en emy. On the 22d he came in sight his advance a heavy body of lancers and cavalry, followed by large bodies of infantry,' and about eighteen pieces of artillery. A skir mish commenced in the afternoon, and the enemy gained the mountain side on our left. On our right of the rohd were impassable gullies, deep and perpendicular, extend ing across to the j mountains, say one mile. On our left of the road commenced steep ascents to the tops of the spurs of the mountain, which united and formed a beauti ful tableland for;a battle-ground, say one mile east and west by half a mile north and south. There were other spurs on the same side, stretching along the road north and south of us, with deep gullies between, many of them impassable, but hone forming a table land like this. A ditch and parapet were immediately thrown across the road, and Washington's battery placed there, support ed by twp companies of volunteers behind another para pet. ; ? On the morning of the 23d the enemy made a rush with his infantry and lancers to possess the table-land, tbe key to the whole position ; and at the same time a column of infantry and cavalry advanced on the road towards Washington's battery. A terrible fight ensued. Our left was forced back to the table-land, and rallied under tbe bank; but our centre charged with a tremendous fire of horse artillery (eight pieces) and volunteers, and hurled them back against the mountain and broke their centre, so that farge bodies of infantry saved themselves by mov ing into the ravines and on tbe spurs of tbe mountains to the rear of our left where we sent regiments and artillery to fight them arid: drive them back across the same ground on our extreme left over which they bad been forced. If we had had but one single foil regiment of regulars in re serve we could have charged their battery on our extreme left and taken four or five thousand prisoners. As it was, we could only hold our own against, such odds. At the close of! the day they.made another charge and rush, in great force, to possess the table land, and were a gain repulsed with grest slaughter, and with much loss on out part. tNigh t; put an end to the scene, and under the cover of darkness tbe enemy retreated to this place. HI. f1JreoTt ligbt HJihVm tbe I was a battle-not inUtakp made ,he whole day; b., man ,eriectly.xh..ed,t night. Our loss about 2G4 killed and 450 wounded.) The ene ni7loa,aboot2)0inkUled and woundeJ.ail 3,000 AnnaiainLuretreta M.t.h. ila and San Lo with hi. army dispirited and dUrgaa- y 1 , ' T h"' ,0-t of high rank. Yr'10 gt correct accounts. ! f. artery mnd dragoons, nor the bravery and good conduct Of th, volunteers., . Wf. Not a atry . dier was in this fight, ; , t 1 wn 7 '? T1 Va,"Uc of- M Lincoln n n,bffri!h'S- Co!. McKee and Lieut. dm were killed beside, others, in the .ecood charge of the enemy. We lost three piece, of cannon, which we had not the men to recover. Our men actually sunk to b"" uviu recessive exnaastion. - ' It has ever been the misfortune of oar brave Lid Gen eral to be obliged to fight the enemy with interior num bers. But there is no backing out with him. ! Thi, his last battle, has done him more credit than any of hi, prev,ou, ones. Hi. case w. not near so desperate at Pa o Aho, for there he had tbe best of regular infantry. 1 had almost forgotten to .peak of our corps. We endeavored to do our duty. Lieut. Benham behaved well, and was .lightly wounded. A. for myself, I wa. more fortunate than at Monterey, .nd escaped unhurt. The old General, however, w made ragd by tbe balls passing through his clothes. ' 1 Yours, &c. JOS. K. MANSFIELD. From the U. States Philadelphia bazette GENERAL ZACHARY TAYjLOR. Never did a man do more for himself; never were the machination, of enemie, more con. founded, more pronely turned to favor the ob. jects they were intended to defeat, than in the case of this distinguished citizen, and! his iUus. trious opponents. f We read in the good book, that Joseph was sold into Egypt, Tn order that his glowing popu. lar.ty at borne might not interfeiie with the vie ws of others ; and even'in Egypt ho was as sailed by most formidable means, Hi, wn merits, however, brought him out of difficulties enabled him to triumph over home and foreign enemies, and made him the ruling man the man whose power was exercised to govern and feed those who would have destroj-ed him. The public voice, the enthusiastic admira. tion of the people, seems to lead to the expect, ation that tho civil, slstesman-likc qualities of '1 aylor, are to be tried as openly, as have been his military talents ; and those who would have disapdointed the public voice, and have crushed the hero of Palo Aho, Resaca de la Palrna, and Monterey, will have. it is likely, to make room for the bero of Buena Vista. A beautiful pros, pect, a good prospect, indeed, of the Phkside. cv, from the plains consecrated by his skill and valor, and the blood and life of the officers and men under his command. :; j It appears now as if Zachary Taylor would be the candidate of the great Anti Polk party for the Presidency ; if he enters upon that cam paign, he must be triumphant, for TAYLOR NEVER SURRENDERS. Ge Taylor The New Orleans Dee of the 24th ult. remarks There seems to be no limit fo jthe claims which Zachary Taylor is accumulating upon the gratitude and undying affection ohthe people. The stalwart old warrier, put him where you will, and with whatever force y6ii please, he has a knack of meeting the foe, and thrashing him too. He appears to have adopted a motto, the language used by him just before the battle of Palo Alto : Should I meet tbe enemy, what, ever be his force, I shall fight him" A battle and a victory are with him synonymous terms. If there was no such word as "fail" in the vo cabulary of Richelieu, that of Old Rough asd Ready contains no such combination of letters as defeat." It seems, likewise, to be his peculiar and felicitous fortune always to have the hard fighting thrown on hi shoulders. When sent back from Victoria to Monterey it was thought that old Zacii had played his part long and gloriously enough on the theatre of war, and that, cooped up in an r impregnable stronghold, he would have little more active service to encounter. But no sooner is public attention diverted from the brave old man, and turned to Vera Cruz, than Santa Anna, by a bold coup de main, crosses a dreary desert, and appears with embattled legions near Saltillo, as if for the very purpose of making Taylor once more observed of all observers; jj If such was bis intention he has fully succeeded. Let oth ers combat as they may let Vera Cruz suc cumb, and San Juan de Ulloa fall, let the proud capital of Mexico itself be captured Gen. Zach ary Taylor will yet be looked upon as the hero of the war ; Palo Alto, Resacaf de la Palrna, Monterey and Buena Vista, will 'still be conse. crated in the remembrance of the Republic as the fields of his glory; while- hit; name and fame become familiar as household words upon the lips of millions who cberiihUhe honor and valor of the warrior as the priceless heritage of our country. jj jj COL. JEFFERSON DAVIS. $ This officer, we are pleased, lo learn, was not severely vounded, as was first suppo sed, in the battle of Beuna 1 Vjfta. The ball struck him in the right foot below the ankle, while in the act of charging the enemy on horseback. He refused to leave the field during the fight, and consequent ly the wound became painful ; ,but when it was supposed that the fight vouId be continued on the 24tb, he, liidej arrange ments to be carried at the head his Reg iment in a wagon ! Such a lierp is wor thy to be, as he is, the son-inllaHy of Old Kougn ana Keady. ; ,nc is saia to De iuui- ized by; ms Regiment, ; V THE CENTRAL . From the'Duilia Even'.r'"- , At the close of the kit m v ..." of December) of the Royal IrUh Ac w. liamiltoQ announced that 1 - ; ceived from Professor MaJ'.rr, tf '? eitraordinary and exciting i: : r 1 presumed dfscovery of a central i . MadlerV essay on the su! j ct (;; Sonne Dorpat, 1840) was also ci! S,r W; Hamilton on the same ever.! eral members of the Academy; I work may not for some time to ccr - 1 rally known, or, indeed, easily rrc" this country, we believe that Lur rc thank us for publishing a sketch cf which it contains, and which were lr, fd on the evening already m?ntkr- course will also aerve to correct at;v , ception on the subject, which the v." nature of the communication, an J t! , . of a great number of the merriHcrs eft demy, may poasibl, have occasioned, t, allowed to arise.- Br .n exteosire sr ! out comparison of the quaothie,' anJ t of the Drier miam r .i. ' . parts of the hefvens, combined wUla iKj; afforded by the parallaxes hUierto d t and with the" theory of unirenal grav Professor Madler has arrived at the cc that the Pleiades form the central -rc whole astral or sidereal synera, ir cl Milky Way and all the briSlter itarj, ! elusive of the more distant neb ! I tars of which those nebulae rr.iy ! c And within this central group iuelf !. : led to fis on the stir Alcyone cth ; r ; by the name of Ata Tauri.) as c;:. ctly or nearly the position of t! gravity, and as entitled to I called u sun. Assuming BissePs parallax if 61 Cygm, long since remarkable f r ; PJ5fr" mo,n ! he correctly c. ; Madler proceeds to form a firit aprci timate of the distance of this central ! the planetary or solar system; and at; tbe (provisional) conclusion, that Alcj bout 34,000,000 times as fat ren,ovcd t or from our own sun, as the latter lu: from us. It would, therefore, accord: estimation, be at least a million times t as the new planet of whichthe thee r deductive discovery has been io great t tiful a triumph of modern astronom r, striking a confirmation of the lav cf . The same approximate determinate tance conducts to the result that the 1!,; central sun occupies more than five 1 in travelling thence to u. The mon bit which our own sun, with the earth other planets, is thus inferred to be d about that distant centre, not indeed l influence alone, but by the combined r of all the stars which are nearer to it : are, and which are estimated to amour. 1 1 than 117,000,000 of masses, each eq : . , total mass of our own solar system, U to require upwards of 18,000.000 of : its complete description, at the rate". " eight geographical miles ia every time. The plane of this vast orbit t f i is judged lo have an inclination cf e! degrees to tbe ecliptic, or to the phc annual orbit of the earth ; and tbe I of the ascending node of the former the latter is concluded to be nearly 237 ' The general conclusions of Madler re tbe constitution of the whole ;sy stem vUl stars, exclusive of the distant nebula , following : He believes that the mid dicated by a very rich group (tLe I". containing many considerable individual 1 though at immense distances from us. this he supposes there is azone. nror poor in stars, and then a broad, rich, r ed layer, followed bran interval corn: devoid of stars, and afterwards by an nular and starry space, perhaps vuih U alternations of tbe same kind, the two rings composing the two parts of th? Way, which are confounded with each c perspective in tbe portions most cHu. ourselves. Professor Madler has ackno . : iu his work his obligations, which are t all inquirers in sidereal astronomy, to is searches of the two Hersche!, Sir Wi:: Sir John. The Tiews of Sir; William f I respecting the relation of our solar $ the Milky Way will natural! recur to t" collection of our readers ; and while z mers are anxiously awaiting the short! ted appearance of the complete accour.t John HerschelV observations on the t nebulae, the following passage of a letter, was written in 1635 by that illustrious an illu$triout sire, from the Cape of Go ' to Sir W. Hamilton, may befread with interest, frorn the agreement between t it expresses and some of those to whT lessor Madler has been led. In the I referred to (from which an extract wai j ed at the timr); Sir John HencLel c himself as follows : , j 44 The general aspect of the southern r polar region, including iu that exr-r deg. or 70 deg. of S. P. D., fs in a 1. ir; rich and magnificent, owing to t!. i brilliancy and larger development cf il Way; which, from tbe constellation 1 to that of Antinous, is one blazB of l::.tt ly interrupted, however, with vacant a: J starless patches, especially in Scor; ' , Ceutauri and the Cross ; while to tie fades away pale and dim, and is in cc: hardly traceable. , I think it is fm;o" view this splendid zone, with the ail on" rich and evenly distributed frin-e c f t the third and fourth magnitudes, which broad skirt to its tout hern border, lik curtain, without anlmpressino, amour.:! conviction, that the Milky Way is net stratum, but an annulus; or, at least, system is placed within ooe cf the pcx: almost vacant parts of its general m tat eccentrically, so as to be much t. tbe parts about the Cross than to that d cally opposed to it. Times. ! 1 , rnr :omr 1 j . s GEN. TAYLOR. The Whigf of Iowa have in State vention nominated General Taylor i Presidency ; and the Whigt papers i State have generally declared for I One of the resolutions of the Iowa f concludes as follows,; - : We fling his banner to the Lrrf : ly relying upon the patriotism cf ti pie to sustain him against the ran I attacks of his enemies, at heme cr a1 f t t.ft 4 i 4r t i. i i . -J j. - i