Farther Foreign News Thn America arrived at New York on Ko oftomnnn nf Friday last. London dates are to the 28th of July. Austria and Hungary. There has again been some severe fight ing in Hungary, and again the Magyars have been victorious. Kossuth appointed Dprrbinski commander-in-chief. "Our Vienna letters vand DaDers.'.' savs the Times, "are of the 20th inst. They con tain no new details of the battle of Wait zen, excepting the official news which our correspondent gives that the Hungarians have succeeded in breaking through the Imperialist lines and marched to the north." The correspondent above alluded - to writes from Presburg on the 19th instant; "For some time the plans of the Hun garian chiefs have been shrouded in mys tery, and we are only now beginning to gain an insight into them. It was in vain 'that Georgey kept so long at Comorn. He there awaited Dembinski, and after this junction, the combined armies co-operated at the battle of Waitzen. Dem binski took up his position with 40,000 men at that place, Georgey maintained his ground at Comorn. Dembinski assumed the offensive, and after a well contested action, forced Pas kewitch to retreat to Demabeez, near Go dollo. Georgey was not equally success ful; although he maintained his ground at first he thcu rht proper to retire to Isra and Corncm. The Hungarians have retaken Neutra. We hear here, that the Russ ians have been compelled to abandon Debreezen from the want of provisions, j Fever and cholera have made fearful rav ages, both in the Austrian and Russian armies; and now that they are beginning to be drawn away from their supplies, the diseases will work their way in corres ponding ratio. "Three ladies of high birth are under imprisonment at Pesth, for having mani fested sympathy for the insurgents. They were tried bv court-martial. P. S. I am just informed (on no less than Imperial authority) that the Kuss-,. Tuj .,;,... nn(it ..r:,i, xans have had a sanguinary conllict with ir , ru ,v,z. of the latter, withalossof nearly 2000 men. The particulars I shall be able lo give you in my next." Another letter describes the Russian retreat to Duna Kees as a disorderly flight ! before Dembinskv s Hussars, and states that the Russians were only saved from annihilation by the arrival of Ramberg. ; It was admitted in Vienna, on the 20th, that the victory of the Hungarians at' it'..:. i I i it aiuc l iiau ueen complete. .. ., , , 1 , ri thus chastising the Russians in the north, Horn it, trio cfntfl nom nlofr r pniah. Bern in the south was cempletely crush ing the army of the Ban Jellachich. Great demonstrations were made at Per Iass, opposite to Titel, and the Servian General Kniczaniiu, devoutly bel'evingin .1 : r.i 1 .u .1. , , . J . . 7 , T i ,m the Tlieiss at this point, continued to disr trenches and stockades with the utmost assiduity, while the main corps of the Hungarians, passed the river at O'Beckse; and Bern, at head of G0,000 men, sudden ly fell upon Jellachich's army and com pletely crushed it. Pcsth offered on Sunday and Monday a spectacle of terror on the one hand, and of hope on the other. The partisans of Kossuth had the boldness to speculate once more in Kossuth bank notes, which they ran up to 65. All houses and cellars were shut close, and so it remained till Tuesday morning. By order of General Ramberg, gcrsy, a secretary of Kossuth, was shot. Kossuth, with the ministers, functiona ries, and chambers, having withdrawn on the 9th to Gzeglcd, subsequently remo ved from thence to Arad, after the surren der of that fortress by the Austrians under General Bergcr. The steamers received orders to move down the river to a place of security. A ministerial crisis at Vienna is report ed. M. Schmerling and Count Leo Thun, are mentioned as likely to be admitted into the cabinet. General Haynau lias been disgraced, and has to resign his command into the hands of General Hesse, who has just been appointed Feldzeugmeister. According to a Vienna letter of the 20th, the Emperors of Russia and Austria have just had an interview at Brunn, the former having arrived in the strictest incognito. Lord Ponsonby, the British ambassa dor, and his family, have arrived at Vi enna. Vienna papers and letters ofthe22d inst. contain a bulletin, which confirms our former accounts of the defeat of Baron Jellachich. The bulletin proceeds to state that the Ban's army suffered a loss of GOO killed and wounded, and among them 14 officers. It is, however, evident that the Ioes of life must be greater by far than the number quoted in the official reports. The head-quarters of the Ban are asserted to be at Ruma, Syrmia. A letter from the camp near Comorn, in the Preesc, gives an awful description of the scenes that arc enacting in the coun try around the fortress. On all sides col umns of fire arc seen rising to the skies, villages, farms, boats and bridges are in flames. The artillery of the fortress and the imperialist batteries, with sixty cannon of the largest calibre, are firing against each other. The KoJncr Zeitung publishes the fol lowing bulletins: "Bistritz. June 2G. Wc have taken Bistritz to-day, No defence was made. The enemy retreated. I will pursue them to-morrow. Bem." "Bistri;Z) JU:1- 'Z0. I have beaten the Russians. Mvoutnosts are atRickendorf. My maiden army fought seven hours with the Russian horse and drove them back. "Postscript My troops have entered Valendorf. Bem. "Bistritz, July 2. I have for the fourth time advanced to Bistritz by way of Gross Sajs and Varsahely. I hold ihe enemy in the denies of Borge, without having had occasion lo claim the assistance of our troops at Karlsburg. Bem." These bulletins are in a manner explain plained by the following news from Con stantinople: On the 21st of June, General Luders took Kronstadt, after a violent contest with 400 Hungarians that had been left in that town After taking Kronstadt, the .Rus sians marched upon Hcrmanstadt. The Hungarians advanced to Togorash to meet them. After a bloody battle, which lasted thirty six hours, General Luders being totally defeated, retreated to Kronstadt, which city is filled with the wounded and flying. nother Russian corps, which was to force an entry from Moldavia into Tran sylvania at Aylosh, was likewise roughly handled, and thrown back into Moldavia. There is also a Russian bulletin, in which the above statements are contra dicted, and in which it is asserted that the Russians fought four small batdes on the 7th, 8th, 10th and 12th inst., in which they killed 200 Hungarians and captured 310, while but two Russians were killed and four wounded. The Commissioner of the Hungarian government writes from Hermanstadt, under date the 3d July, that the Russiaus have been forced to retreat to Kronstadt. Bem was preparing to attack that city on the 8th or 9th July. The seat of the Hungarian government has been transferred to Arad, on the 14th July. This last circumstance proves the assurance with which Bem hopes to finish with the Russians in Transylvania, and, on the other hand, it confirms the defeat of Jellachich, because, if the army of the south was still formidable, the Hungarian I . 1,1 .1 .!, , ., . city of Arad for its residence, as it would , J , ' oe between two nres. FRANCE. It was reported in Paris that the Pope intended to visit the French capital, and thf Pmsiilnnt of the Renublic and the Ministers would proceed to Bourges to meet his Holiness. The Tiers. M. 11 V. f 1 1 UUU klLV lit- A3 U Will A ned scourire, lias attracted not a little f..,.:. f". .i.:i.. .,-,r attention lrom the daily press; and one ol calamitipa 0Af lhe times, coders it a sPe- ..... - .... - . cial visitation of the Almighty, for the sins of mankind. But he seems to overlook one very striking fact that if fire, flood and pestilence are the terrible evils of the times, that we are also visited by signal ""'" " " blessings to compensate lor, and couuter- act tlicm. Inste; ad of famine, we are sur rwunded by vast abundance. The earth teems with her fruits. Prosperity crowns our trade, and the returns of co'mmerce enrich the land. If we lose much by flood and lire, still will there remain a great balance in our favor. I he pestilence, though fraught with wo to the bereaved heart, must be designed for good in its consequences. 1 he movements ot the world must be active. Where man is, commotion, agitation, convulsion, will prevail. After all, what a happy contrast do we exhibit, when our condition is com pared to that ol Europe! Fire, flood and pestilence are common to all the earth. But Europe, in addition to all these, is accursed by ever)' civil wrong, social op pression, and political scourge, that tyran ny, bigotry and sectarianism can invent, as a torrent to humanity. The events of the new world are bright and cheering compaied to those of the old; and yet, the latter has a brilliant future to look forward to. Abounding in money, successful in trade, blessed with an ever productive induclry, the old world wears a smile of regeneration on her wrinkled front, that augurs well for her freedom, not less than her prosperity. Gold! gold! cold! is the cry of her bankers, brokers, exchangers and merchants. Constitutions! Rights and r reeuoml is the cry ol her people. And the cry must end in reality. Perhaps no age of the world before gave such abun dant evidence of God's goodness, instead ol God s vengeance. No page in the volume of mankind, beams with so much radiance, as the one now open before us. And this too! in the face of French nerfidv and Roman subjection; both, however grievious and disgraceful, mere spots on the sun's disc. Neither the walls of Paris, nor the gates of Rome, embrace earth's population of freedom. Heads of far-see ing sagacity, both in the old and new world, anticipate immense business, and prodi gious profits, during the year 1850. But will they be realized? The probabilities arc all in favor of it. The elements are spread before us; and if they continue. 1850 will shame her predecessors. here, then, lower the clouds of adversity. that arc to scatter their fires, and hurl their thunder-bolls, as punishment for sin? Is pestilence, fires and flood, nothing? What are they, wc answer, but partial evils, unfelt in the general lot of human joy, and scarcely to be estimated as an atom in the creation a drop in the wide and unmeas ured ocean of human beings. Ledger. .'2 California Speculation. It is said that an ingenious Yankee isabout to take to California a large number of laying hens. Eggs sell at San Francisco for three dollars a dozen. He thinks they will lay enough on the voyage to . make him inde pendent immediately upon his arrival. . Heroics of "Heroic Age." "Heroic Aoe," of the Washington Union, however he may be ridiculed by the Republic, holds a pen like the scime ter of Saladix, keen, flashing, and irre sistible. We have read his articles with much pleasure; and although they are ex clusively devoted to politics, or rather to a consideration of the merits of Taylorism, they are remarkably agreeable and in structive reading. We give a few of the specimens of his style: Pennsylvanian. The inhabitants of the South Sea islands have a curious way of catching monkeys. 1 hese little devils, m the shape of human ity barring their way of carrying them selves amuse themselves " by imitating anything that mortals do in their presence. The natives, therefore, get a tough log of wood of some length, and begin with wedges of stone and wood to split it. As they progress, they put in larger wedges, until the split is held open by one or two wedges easily knocked out. They then put their hands in the split, and endeavor, by pulling out both sides, to part the log. Occasionally one knocks the wedges with the beetle, and all commence at a dead pull upon the parts of the log again. When a sufficient number of monkeys have congregated about the tree to make a demonstration, the natives leave the log with the beetle beside it, and repair to a neighboring thicket to await the result. Soon one monkey drops down and takes hold of the log, then another, and then another, until the split is lined with their black paws from one end to the other. When this is done, a monkey, not to be outdone in his part of the performances seizes the beetle, and knocks away at the wedges, which, ol a sudden, fly out, lea ving a baker's dozen caught in a trap as safe as a platoon of cats in a bag. Isn't there hallooing then? and don't those long tailed individuals consider themselves ta ken in about that time? Can't they chat ter then, and even cry piteously for help? And don't they, when relieved, have a sovereign contempt for splits even unto the day of their death? Well, we con sider the Democrats, who supported Zachary Washington, for the benefit of the Whig party, as in the predicament of tne monkeys, with their paws in the cleft log; and if they don't denounce their lead ers and teachers hereafter, it will be be cause they have less sense than the real monkeys, and a better claim to "A jacket of gre9n, with breeches of blua. And a hole just behind for tba tail to come through." And now for the luck of "Zachary Washington." The Second Washington was lucky in going to Mexico to fight the battles of his country. He was lucky in getting back from Fort Brown to Point Isabel, without being forced to fight a battle without am munition. He was lucky in fighting the batUe of Buena Vista against orders, and as he said, with a halter about his neck, after the extraordinary capitulation of Monterey. He was lucky in having men fitted for the service he was lucky in having a Worth, a Wool, and a Childs, to aid him. He was lucky in getting back from Saltillo to the field of Buena Vista without being cut off by the Mexican cav alry. He was lucky in having his letters well indited; in having his pledges short, sweet, and comprehensive; in having weak ppponants in the Whig ranks in Phila delphia; and in having Democratic friends in the country, who really thought him a better Democrat than Gen. Cass, and a truer patriot than Washington; and now when the affairs of State begin to press heavily upon him, how lucky he is in having a cabinet who desire to do all his business for him, and monopolize all his patronage and power. We respect a lucky man he is the in dividual "for our money; like a cat ;hrown out a chamber window, he always drops with his feet down. A man may be lucky without finding a soft soap mine, and respectable without having the dys pepsia, and as is sufficiendy shown in the model organ, may be witty without a spark of common sense. By the way, in future years, when the Genius of Liberty shall plough about the high places of the re public, we should not be surprised if the savans of Europe should be called togeth er by the horn of science to examine the relics of the past that burden the soil, and which will then be known by the appella ation of the organic remains of the "HEROIC GE." The following account of a green horn's visit to a ship, is intended to elucidate the wisdom of certain of the Presidential in vestigations: As he mounted the sides of the vessel, ha k i vc r-h aired old boatswain, aresseu in uniform, with a silver , call, was piping . T V 1 1. A. most melodiously, lie seizeu me ooai swain with both hands, thinking he was the captain, there6y putting his pipe out, and astonishing him by his familiarity. Old Junk retreated forward among his messmates, who asked him what he thought of the head of 'the sea lions. "A tlamn'il nrettv fellow he is," said the ofl- ended dignitary, "not to know a boatswain from the captain of a line-of-battle-ship." Things;, however, went off very well until the otlicial went forward and looked down the main hatch. As this extraordinary hole gaped before him, he seized the cap tain by the arm and exclaimed, in a voice of tremulous astonishment, "By Heavens, she is hollow?" and echo, down in the deeper vortex, in the shape of the captain of the hold, answered, "She is hollow!" and the man on the royal yard heard it, and, with a smile upon his bronzed coun tenance, unwittingly, shouted, "She is hollow;" And blessed b? God, she was hollow. Nothing late from California. Salaries here and in England. The Reformer Richard Cobden, some days ago, in a recent debate in the British House of Parliament on the bill to reduce the expenses of the government twenty per cent., made the following striking comparrison between England and this country, and the public men of each: A salary of JC5000 a year for occupy ing the Treasury bench was much more than need be paid to any man. He would go further than a reduction of 10 per cent. on such salaries. Why, considering the general range of profits and prices, should we pay our public officers more than double the salaries paid to the public offi cer of any other country? Take the Uni ted States. (Hear, hear.) It was a great empire, second only to ourselves in mari time importance. Well, the four princi pal Secretaries of State in the United States received only 1,250 a year each. Now those men corresponded in dignity and importance with the Secretaries of this and other countries, and were in all re spects quite as distinguished as they were. It was impossible that any individual on the Treasury bench could conceive that he (Mr. Cobden) in any way detracted from their importance or their merits, by com paring them with those men. Take next, the diplomatic officers. Our ambassador to Paris had .10,000 a year; our ambas sador to Austria had .9,000 a year; and our Minister to Spain had 6,500 a year; while the United States did not pay to their highest diplomatic functionary more than 2,000 a year. Now, he put it lo the house had they one ambassador or minister abroad who would consider it derogatory to his dignity to be compared with Mr. Bancroft? Had they a superior man to Mr. Bancroft? (Hear.) Who amongst them all stands higher in his profession, or n9 a man? Why, then, should we pay 10,000 a year to an am bassador at Paris, when the Americans pay only 2,000 to their ambassador at Paris? But it was not his proposition that the salaries paid this country should be reduced to the same figure as that of the United States. Let it not be said he was for bringing down their establishment to those of a rppublic. If the house would reduce them 20 per cent, that would satisfy him, and they would be still well paid. But what he wished the public function aries of this country to exhibit more prom inently was a sense of loyalty, and an ap preciation of the honor which attached to the holding of office, and not an exclusive desire to being paid for carrying on the public establishments of the country. Were such a feeling displayed by public men it would greatly enhance the dignity of their position and heighten the estima tion in which they would be held by the community. He had thus, then, indicated what was the class of officers the reduction of whose salaries he wished to see effected. There were, in his opinion, not only many that might be reduced, but many public ser vants whose services might be dispensed with altogether. The hon. gentleman had lost sight of the great number of su pernumeraries that we had, and who were not required. The noble lord at the head of the Government had stated that Prime Ministers formerly had sinecure offices, which they could give to their sons. Now, it did not seem to him that Minis ters of the present day lost sight of their relations altogether. ("Hear," and laugh ter.) A great part of the patronage at the disposal of our Ministers ought to be con sidered as some compensation for the la bors of their offices. Besides, there were retiring pensions in this country, but in America there were no retiring pensions for civil services. California, We have before us a private letter, written by a genUeman of property, now returned from California, which country he had visited in the United States ship Ohio, simply for the purpose of seeing it. The facts which he states are therefore, without either the bias of interest or disap pointment. He states that Mr. Ithamar Whiting, formerly of Dedham, Mass. and the two Ranneys, from Chicopee Falls, are in California. The Ranneys he left at the Stanislaus "dry diggins," with a party of 15, sick of their speculation, and regretting that they had given up their comfortable situations. The situations they had left were at a factory in Tepic, Mexico. Whiting's income from his fac tory, at the same place, last year, was $22'000, and yet he left all to dig gold. The writer left him at San Francisco ill, where he probably died. He says that California is the worst "hole of a place" he ever was in, and that thousands of dis appointed people were arriving every day. The writer states that he went up to the mines in company with a gentleman who had expended considerable money in brin ging along fifteen Indians to assist him, but they did not succeed in getting more than an ounce apiece per day, and that the man was aisgusieu wiui me mines, as every decent person is wno goes mere. These statements in regard to California, are, without uoudi, too true. ine sacri fice of home and friends, for gold, does not pay, and particularly is this the case with those who leave good and lucrative situa tions. Springfield Republican. Western Boatmen. An effort is beinj; made in St. Louis and elsewhere, to es tablish a Chapel for the use of Boatmen on the Western waters. There were 80,000 of these men employed on the steamboats, and 20,000 more, it is stated upon the keel and flatboats, of the., Mississippi and its tributaries. More than 8,000 are directly connected with the est. Louis trade alone; and on an average, some 1500 are on shore ose within w.c ihe object cfa pale of good influences, is me oojeci c new association, navmg us neauquurveia &i( St. Louis, under the title of the "Western Boatmen's Union. The boatmen thrm selves are said to be anxious that this work should go on, offering to be held responsi-j ble for the salary ol tnetr minister, i ne character of this euterprise is such as will secure it many friends and supporters, and it is to be hoped the work may be per fected. , Long and Short Articles. A long newspaper article, like a "great book," is a great evil. They are less apt to be read; and if perused at all, a great part ofi their effect is necessarily lost; if the be ginning is lost before the end is reached. Short articles, on the contrary, as they are most easily read and remembered, are most likely to be useful. Virgil's good old maxim in agriculture, is equally appli cable in writing for the public. Admire, says, he, 'large farms, cultivate small ones.' Many subjects cannot justly be treated with brevity. But such are not suitable to the columns of a newspaper; they should be discussed in the monthlies or quarter lies, or in books. A newspaper article or paragraph (they should be nearly synony mous) should be brief, and to the point. It is a great art to say, either verbally or in print, just what one has to say, and no more, and to stop when you have finish ed Charlestown Free Press. The Mexican Proctocol. This document, which has already created some noise in the public prints, is likely to be a subject of much discussion in the next Congress. A correspondence has sprung up recently between Rosas, the Mexican Minister of Foreign Affairs, and Mr. Clapton, in respect to its force as a paitofthe late treaty between the two countries. Mr. Clayton, we learn, goes the full length of denying any validity to the proctocol at all, it forming no part of the ratified treaty, never having received the sanction of Congress, and being inconsist ent with the Constitution of the United States in some of its requirements, partic ularly that which recognizes the predomi nance of a particular religion in the ceded territories, the grant of land, &c. The subject is likely to be one of interest in the next session of Congress. Mr. Clifford U. 'S. Minister of Mexico, one of the Commissioners who agreed to the procto col, is to be recalled, and is likely to be succeeded by governor Letcher of Ken tucky. The Mexican journals, we see, announce the fact of the succession, but it has yet, we understand, not been fully determined upon.- Phila. Ledger. In Pennsylvania and New Jersey, it has been remarked, the rates of travelling are higher in proportion to distance, than in any of the northern states. This is not good policy, as has been proven by expe riment in other states. The Harrisburg Keystone in commenting upon this topic, has the subjoined remarks: "Last week we adverted to the high rates of fare, between this place and Phil adelphia, and intended to follow it up by a comparison with the charges on other routes, in different part3 of the United States. This we have not found time to do; but we are fully satisfied that the rates between Philadelphia and Pittsburg, ought not and will not, when the Central road is completed through, exceed 2 j cents per mile, and we do not think the way travel ought to be higher. We feel confident, that the company and state, will find it to their interest to reduce it to this rate. when fare is high, none but those who have business, or who are wealthy, are likely to travel; but when it is low, many persons of moderate means, who wish to visit their friends, or take a little recrea tion, will avail themselves of the opportu nity. It will bring the recreation of trav eling, within the means of a class, that is now, to a great extent, excluded from it. If the company and the state, by this means, can make as much money, if not more, than they can by higher rates, and at the same time accomodate the public and make the works popular, why should it not be done? We sincerely hope that the canal commissioners, in any new ar rangement, will have this object constandy in view, and we cannot but believe the Pennsylvania company will cordially sec ond their efforts. The Mexican Volunteers. A Washington correspondent of the Pittsbvrg Post, says, with much force: Taylor is a man of strong passions and prejudices, and the men about him humor these; and where their dislikes and prejudi ces unite with his, the combination of them all together, backed by supreme power. make all attempts to counteract their evil influence, hopeless. Thus-Tay lor hates, with the strongest hatred, all the Mexican volunteers. With his Cabinet, this hatred is as bitter as his own. This feelincr is also general with the whole army, who have from old associations, an indirect or sustaining influence over Taylor. So that all the influence around the President are adverse to the volunteers of the Mexi can war. The new army soldiers, com prising among them, some of the ablest men of the Nation, are a proscribed class. They are looked upon, by a certain order of Whigs, patriots of the Truman Smith class, and such as make up Taylor's Cab inet, as vagabonds and oudaws, as a de graded class, without mind, conscience or respectabuity. These volunteers, there lore, officers and men, with a tew excep tions, where personal or family ties and influences make it otherwise, you may please set down as a class beneath the no tice of the administration, or rather as a at one time. To place th( class who wera t!G volaatiry instrument of the last administration in carrying a a,w auiamibirauoa in carrying 0n vi uu3uuu mey are condemued and proscribed.- . , ACADEMY ELECTION AN election will bo held at the Court H in the Borough in Ebensburg, on Wednct(!t ereuing the 23J in3t., t 7 o'clock P. M ' i . rr f i . '? out. luuiieen iiuncei or aia Academy, to t;, until the firet Monday in April ncit. ' liy order of the Board. ' JOHNSTON MOORE. rrtrident. August 6, IS13. PAY UP ! PAY UPTT A LL persons indebted to the subscriber tr 2sL are requested to come forward and stt!s their respective accounts on or before the 12t, day of September next, otherwise they at, be waited on by officer of the law. II is books are left in tho hands of DaiJ . Kobers, Esq., who is fully authorized to setllo the same. JOHN DUMFORD. August 9, 1819. 14 VALUABLE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. T1 HE subscriber wishes to dispose of hi farm in Carrol township, at private sale, arm consists of sixty acres of superior The farm land, having about forty five acres cleared. There is a pood BANK DARN on the pUcs and a tolerably good LOG HOUSE. Th. place is a very desirable one for a farmer, be. ing in very good order and well fenced. Pot. session can be given at the first of November, if necessary. Application to ba made on tha premises, or to the subscriber in Lorelto. PETER FLANEGAN. August 9, J849 44-3t. TffO be sold at Public Sale at Saturday the JL first day of September next, by the sub. scriber, attorney in fact of George Wisel,3r., ai the residence of the said George Wise, in Conemaugh township, a certain TRACT OF LAND, containing one hundred and twenty four acres, or thereabouts. There is an EXCELLENT ORCHARD on the premises, with fioJerately good log buildings, and about thirty acres cleared. The situation is a very desirable one, convenient to the Portage Railroad, and to the cunlempUleJ route of the Central Railroad. There will also bo sold at the same time aod place a variety of personal propetty, consisting in part of O.tesettof Blacksmiths Tools, Carpen ter Tools, Sugar Kettles, one Cow, one Loom, and Household and Kitchen Furniture too 7i merousto mention. The terms will be made known at the preiniss on the day of sale. Sale to commence at 10 o'clock, A. M. GEORGE MURRAY. August 8, 1849. 44-4t. ITTThe ' Cambria Transcript" will insert the above until day of sale and charge this of fice. PUBLICSALE. w ILL be sold at Public Sale at the resi dence of the subscriber, one mile South of Ebensburg, on FRIDAY the 3 1st day of August inst., the following property to wit: Horses, Cows and Young Cattle, Sheep and Hogs, Hay and Oats, all kinds of farming utensils, a lot of . dry Lumber, with a varie ty of Household and . Kitchen Furniture . '. too numerous to mention. Sile to commsoo at 10 o'clock A. M. of said day when daa at tendance and a reasonable credit will be givon by DAVID W. PRYCE. Executoanf Wra. Pryce, dee'd. Augu.t 9, 1849 14-3t. PROPOSALS, PROPOSALS will be received at the En gineers Office, in Lewistown, until the 25th of August, for the delivery on the line of the Pennsylvania Rail Road on each half mils of the said Road between the Portage Rail Road and Robinson's Ridge or on the aids of the Allegheny Portage Rail Road, at or atove Gayport, of 600.000 feet B. M. of Whito Pine or Hemlock lumber. The proposals to state the kind of timber. Tho timber to be fre from wavey edges and not to have exceeding 1 inches sap on the face of either corner of the stick it will a'so be clear of windshakes and other material de fects. E?ch piece to be 20 ft. long clear of stump shot and sawed 6x8 inches with allow, ance for sinkage. ' ALSO; I COO cross ties upon each mile of said dis tance, 550 to be 8 feet in length and reduced to 8h inches in thickness by hewing or sawing two sides to straight and smooth parallel sur faces of 10 inches in width. And 1050 cross ties same length and reduced to 6 inches in thickness in the same manner to surfaces of 8 inches, or the large lies may be sawed 8 by 10 inches, and the . small ones 6x8 inches. All the ties to be obtained of good sound White Oak or Vouog Chesnut tim ber free fro.m wind shakes or other material de fects. They will be divested of the bark before delivery." Proposals will be 'addressed to - Wm. U. FOSTER, Jrn Associate Engineer, Engineers Office E. Div. Pa. R. R. Lewistown J. EDGAR THOMSON. w " Chief Engineer Pa. R.Ri Co. Aug. 9, 1849 44-td. ---- . TO IRON MASTERS. THEl Blacklick Furnace', situate in Cambria county, about 12 miles west of Ebens burgand seven miles from the Pennsylvania Canal, is now offered for Sale or Rent on the most accommodating terms. ; The Slack and Buildings of every, kind ba ing in good repair, only a small, outlay of mon ey will be required to put the Furnace in oper ation. ' , - ' : . . : The Property, comprising any desirable quantity of land, will be sold on easy payments, or rented for a term of years, with use of tinu ber, &.c. ' For terras apply to the subscriber at hit ri dence at Ebensburg. Cambria county. Pa. - - EDWARD SHOEMAKER- Juna 20, 1849. 37-8t, , . PUBLIC SALE !