3cffcvsoutan Republican, j -- - .-j: - Thursday, December , 1852. xr it' iita .lit u'iA ! 1 1 1 ', hJWlfl!tlfll(t:i..tIIIIl!.. t l n npponininilMo tioh of our Subscr?bers WL are indebted'' to us, -and Buuscrsoers. who arc " uvuiw u, rAnnot make t convenient to pay, we are 1 1 vu u v u . - , willing to receive, a lot of good sound ' . i . f j l ury floou. "V". , " " , . patrons wm aau uic.ms,L ol yV- nortunitv and souare up tncir accounts. ( portumt ..na .guar p Meeting Of COKgreSS. ; The two houses of Congress assembled nf Wnsliirmton on Mondav last, the uth inst. The President's message was laid o before both Houses on Tuesday at noon n. ' a -5 The message will appear in next week Bepublican. As this is the short session, to last only to the 4th of 31arch, it is ex- pected that some business vriil le done. But the parceling out of the spoils, and ... m - settling the course to be p.ir,:ued by the party to come into power may cause a . waste of time, and prevent the legitimate ' business from being attended to. , 1 XO3 Abraham W. Hausc was tried at Banville, on the 30th ult., on the charge having paper in his possession, with the intention of counterfeiting bank note?, was found guilty of the charge. On the first inst,, the Court sentenced him to seven years imprisonment in the Eastern Peni tentiary. His son Lewis, who was tried at thc same term, on the charge oi utter- ing and delivering one counterfeit 5 note on the York bank and one $2 counterfeit note on the Lancaster bank, was acquit edj but is re-committed to prison. Christmas Close at Hand. The Pictorial Brother Jonathan, a mammoth sheet of spirited Engravings for to us by the publisher, Mr. B. II. Day, 48 Beekman street, New York. Among the largest of the series of pictures con tained in it, " The Christmas Turkey," by Matterson,is a very appropriate and elegant one. But we have no room for particulars suffice it to sav- the Jonathan tins year is a pictorial paper of uncommon upon the crime, and three young men, neatness and beauty. The price is 12 ' whoso ages range from eighteen to twenty ! cents per copy, or ten for one dollar. ' three, have been condemned for the mur- j der. j Sudden Death. j At the close of the present term of this ! Mr. Christian Eilenberger, of Smith- . Court, on Saturday next, no less than six field townshipnth1!3ouutyJ,died sud- human beiugs will be brought up for denly at Bell's mill, on Friday last. Mr. ' sentence of death, namely, Howlett, Saul E. brougbt a load of grain to the mill, and Johnson, for thc murder of Baxter; ' and while emptying the last bag, fell back Doyle, for the murder of his landlady; : and expired -without a struggle. An in- and Clark and Sullivan for resentence ' quest was held byFrankliu-Starbiin3', Esq. Clark for the murder of Gillespie, a po on the body. Yerdiet " Yisitation of liceman, and Sullivan for the murder of God." ! Smith, who interfered between him and j ' his wife in a domestic broii. ! More Repudiation. The Governor of Arkansas recommends repudiation. The State owes two millions of dollars, and has nothing to show for it not a mile of railroad, nor any great public works She has wasted half a million of acres of " land, lavished upon her by the Federal Government. And now the Governor hints at repudiation, on aocount of the ' unwillingness of the people to pay the in terest on the public debts. S35T"A correspondent of the New York Herald says: General Cushing, of Mas sachusetts, Governor Seymour, of Con necticut, and General Pillow, of Tennes see, are the personal friends of General Pierce, and will be provided for, though not in the Cabinet. Cushing will go to France, Seymour to Mexico, and Pillow will be consul to Mixico. rpi -r n The Locofoco newspapers gener- ally condemn the conduct of President Fillmore in communicating to Congress the documents relating to the attended acquisition of Cuba. They fear it will embarrass the operations of the next Ad cj 1 ministration in reference to that Island The President acted in obedience to a ' Col. King. The Washington Union says . -The : rumor of the illness of this distinguished gentleman, which has prevailed to some ' . . it. t n i. r i v ! soare that the health of Col. K.ng poS; , eesses even more than its usual vigor and promises to sustain him in the discharge of the duties of thafc exalted position to which he has just been elevated by his countrymen. Col. King is daily expected in Washington, where lie will meet friends' from all parts fof the Uuipn jto cpngratu-.j late him on his w.cil-.ear.hd ' distinction.'. it resolution oi vjougress, without lnquirinjr ' ueac . uncuus, uavc ubu turn iu luassa- tne nrst-neing one to every iud.o; or i-i? r ft ... . . i.iiiii. jiK i K ii.ii ;Mi-?iiit;i ii'i.i i iiu- 11111. itnnnr nil i . i. i .1 r 1 how it would affect Filibusterism. tbe' knew tbe Scese gradually drawing chnsctts at 8100 the pair. Several pairs second, to 100 29; of the third and four vvui,. j'j nv uic ii i- iiiuBi uave ueeu going, wnen last seen, at ( jff u"1! ,iu,"',u) uuiu. xnu uiaeuaua wmun are sue especi- worif, in rooms exceedingly well nttcd up, py to state, without the least foundation ' the rate of sixty or seventy miles an hour ' tb.e SUms Jhicb have bcen recently ob' al cause of this great mortality in the two all sorts of people upon all sorts of jobs! in fact. We lnrn from .in n.it.l.Pnfio. tm. ; M i.. j tamed in England for fancy fowls. The extremes of our Uuion, are probably con- , Some of the best warerooms and sales- 4 - 41. .7 : . 1 . -i i . . . . . " j.4j liici; jl aug u uavu OtJUU UUblYUCU , Man rrTitrrT,-am'CT VS'IjIks ! Slniul yomv Uaiifc. Our venerable friend 'Biddlc, of the Pittsburg American , gives the following ood counsel and words of encouragement ; r , ttt vi n tAM 4ilft to the Wings. We like the tone of the t 1 i 11 It ZL ...til fi.iil n riA I n 1 old iciiow, ana Know ii nmuuu a. , response among the Whigs of Monroe. They never surrender." wc say to the whigs how to your ranKS. The enemy have run tnrouga ub ovcrpowering us in nmnbers, but in hostile associations. In a few j'ears ; . . I witnin tne cycie oi a a luaiucuwui iwiu - they will be torn with dissention and i c -i hroke bv divisions in their rush for spoils, I . , . c ti:.il:i i ' and tho proud yhlg flag will loom up a- " .... I crnin and be looked to as the anchor oi.i.w m;iitarv achievements ot Ueneral O 1 fr;niuls of the country in "k" - afiHction We therefore say to the Whigs every herc despair not, but stand to your or- j3rauix'ailvu- j(jBlaisc Skupinski, one of the Poles ,' . , i r u convicted of the murder of the pedlar boy ; m -i i i i 1 on i?rid a', accord ingtolaw. ITeprotes-:"1 to the last, and said he .,1 TT. , 5e with God. His broth- ted j, i,mocence iiad made his peace er Matthias, it will be remembered, was I f executed some time ago Two persons were awfully mutilated by the bursting of a cannon at the Domocrat- ic celebration at Allentown, Pa., on Sat- urday evening last. Stroudsburg Jcffcr- S0lajL Not exactly, neighbor. The above is an item of news not heretofore noted in this neighborhood. 2so such accident oc curred at the Democratic eclebraiion here and nothing that we have heard of was " awfully mutilated" in this region save thc rancs of the iate Whig party. f0lcn Democrat. Allen- i Winter has set in early and cold in Northern Wisconsin. Acorns are scarce, ' and bears are so ravenous that one recont , ly caught near its house and devoured a child only three years old. w . Work for lUe Gallows In the Court of Oyer and Terminer, at New York, on Tuesday, William Johnson was found guilty of the murder of Baxter, j (a watchman on board the ship Thomas .' Watson.) of which Nichohis llowlcl and j William Scad had been previously con-, victed. Thus three separate juries passed ; Race Between a Locomotive and a Flock of Gccsci The Piochester American has the follow ing incident: "Coming upon the express train the other day, it so happened that on leaving Fonda, a flock of some thirty ; wild geese swept over into the valley of the Mohawk, just as the cars were under way. These geese, being manifestly be- wrildered, kept on steadily up the river, but well over on the opposite side of the vnlW 1, o ernnA ,.l,nn,n in mr their speed with the lightning train was anoruea. At nrst it seemea to ue apout an 'even thing,' but after a few momenta it was readily perceivable that the geese were drawing ahead of the locomnti. ' After a few minutes the flock seemed half , inclined to drop down into the Mohawk, ! and abated much of their speed, the en- 1 cine recovering the lost "-round; but the , . . . oWWM ' gse thought better of it, changed front, 1 S0USht a Sre?ter Ovation, and pushed a- . neau aSain 1U tue same t tne train. n,.i,:.t:.t,,.,i, .,; jj ui umi, iutimc utviaiiiv; ijuiii; exciting, and one could hardly refrain from exclaiming, engine; pair m, g0Se;' but thcre waS n0 need of exll0rta Falls, when the bevy hauled up iu the wind's eye, shivered a moment, and stood . down the river again, having gained in the race about two miles. The geese i . , . , a looomofve and the feathered raee, and, though the latter had the best of it. the. I former did well, considering that it wa3 compelled to carry weight." HThc Scientfic American, gives a new.cure for hiccough. Raise one or both hands high above your bead. Tt ..issaid to be a certain remedy. . I ahead till within a short distance ot Little wiuhu iu uum, mourns, jjast weeit to a.uu and u.o. The average of JN (reneralScotti At an ussemblagetof the Democrats ol- W York atTanunanv Hall on Monday j nlht for the purpose of celebrating their ' . e ,i i Pn rcccDt vict0ry one 0f the speakers, Gen. tit 11 1 1 1 1- I UnrfVfteG waioridge, a nieniDer ciuub w wuoi",'j held the following language in reference to General Scott: . Gentlemen as I have stated, in our ex- uenuemen, a x . ' , T tation let us be magnanimous ; and I ultation let us ne maguau, uu V believe I but express the sentiments ot the democracy of the city and couuty ot , - . , 1. 1 i,... n. mn CjT anu oi cuu wuuwuuuuj, nuxu dcolaro it will afford them the highest , u i loasure to have our callant and patriotic iresident express our sense of the bril- r , .i w:i,i Spnt wnnmnimidino- the nas- m i miuuu.., j 0 j Qf & offic(j of lieuten jant genera the highest title recognized ( in mintary distinction, that honor and ' I er failed at the head of the armies of the j ullu uuuumv.ou , United States, and whom we regard umK- ' createst military chieftain ot the ag ivrl iho " ' . V ! longed cheers, and cries of "thats right. , 'flint's ri'ht.'' ; tu'lt V , ; . ! sed ' Geonrc Vickcrs, of Chester town, rais tins vo.ar 2Si barrels of corn on one acre, ' 1 two roods and three perches of ground beins at the rate of " one hundred and three bushels and a third of a bushel to the acre S" The land has had two hun dred bushels of lime to the acre, or two limings at different periods of 100 bush els each. When put in corn last spring, it was a clover ley, and was moderately cast -with manure a short time before be- ing plowed. The conr was drilled ; the rows were about four and a half feet dis- tant, and the hills about IS inches, with two stalks in a hill. Thc Kent News states that the late Wm. Miller, raised 103 bushels to thc a crc. The premium corn raised by a mem ber of thc Agricultural Society two years since, was SG bushels. A Profitable Meadow. A farmer in Canton Mass., has a cranberry meadow of 22 acres in extent, lying near Puuka- pong Pond, from which he has raked, the present season, upwards of 1,000 bushels of fine cranberries, for which he has. real- "N. ized $3,000 cash. To Editors, A journeyman printer, named Joseph Stevens of Fort Wayne, Ind.,left home in 1S44, and was last heard of in 1847. His parents are in great distress on his account, and will be thankful to any one who will give them an' information of him. CgrEditors everywhere please copy. J jOn Wednesday morning, at Jersey City, two little children were left in a room alone, where was sleeping an infant when one of them procured a large butch er's knife, and said to the other, "come, let us cut the baby's head off." The' ac cordingly approached the cradle, turning down the clothes, and werc in the act of drawing thc knife across thc infant's throat; when 'an elder brother fortunately entered the room and prevented them j-The Mobile Tribune states that, the celebrated trotting horse, "Murdock," has been sold bv his owner. Mr. Cottrell. to a Xew York sporting man, for thc sum of $25,000. . ' fiST bill IS before tllC OllIO Legisla- colored ' , intQ thafc gtate i . . -l . . i : i i . T '6 ' - The Fowl Fever. i It would seem by the following para - gP1'? which wc extract from the New ?n6and Cdtivator thf ffver lms bv nn nif;ins nbntnd in that minrtfiv Af. tho hxtP Unstnn Pnwl TMiihitinn (in September, 1852,) three Cochin Chi- nas were sold at 8100. A pair of gray , . ... . rn 1n... bn, .r ncsc utt $80. Three gray Shanghai cMcks, J65.-Thrce white Shanghais at 86S. fcix white bhangliai chickens :?40 gaz. .e. c a V'J ) ixv,., auu nicnu yi luua, 1U1 SUIIUUl samples, could now be obtained again and " Within three months, extra samples ,..,. r ii... 1 ni' U1 juia uiu luma ui iurru jm- ' - t..: c cm u: sa" LllJ U1 "m"u OIltl 'cuais &olu 111 lJZfL SS!!! 1 te purl chasers at the South and West." ' 'l.nsn A r v n r. .. . I uunugu uu-uwew oajo . Within the last few weeks, a gentleman near London has sold a nail" Of Cochin . .A GmKa fowls for J0 guineas, (loO) and anomer pair at o guineas, iuu.; uQ has been offered 20 for a single hen; has sold eggs at 1 guinea (85) each, and has been paid down for chickens just hatched, 12 guineas ($60) the half dozen tobe de- livered a month old. One amateur aolne has paid upwards of 400 for stock birds. I From tte-Xm -York JTimcs.. jSbvemler Thtf Census of 1B50. The full report of tlic' census has not. to our knowledge, reached our city as yet. The "abstract" is before us, and contains J-ne tont hlforniatio'n in a ve . eomDact form. ju reSpCCt to territory, it appears that during the last ten years we have extend- ed the area ot the United states irom 055,153 to 3,230,372 square miles, with- " i . ' ' , , nv ',, cpn 0ut including the great lakes or the sea , The population cained by these acces- .. : .,. biuiia io . . as yet come in from California; but as- j summg its population, partly by estimate, ' o 1 P i J . ...n 17') iX'n tn rntitrns Imvo au iO'J, UUU, me Wliuiu puuuiuuuu ui uiu Unionis 23,263,488. Absolute increase from 1840. 0.194.035; increase per cent., ' - i 30.28: or. deducting that from addition ' j Ai w ?f territory, and the relative increase is ofwhites is x 9,030,738, and the relative increase the last ten years The slaves amount to 3.204,089; rela- is . tivc increase, 38.81 per cent. The number ot tree colored is 42S,0bl; ; relative increase since 1840, 10.96 per ' cent' K we , blcs it a wh5teg ia refer to the data of previous ta-; ippcars that the increase of the tne union every aecaae since 1790 has been very equal; being lowest from 1820 to 1830 (33.95 per cent.;) and 1.: l,loaf flQ OO .n nnnf "IVUl, i i . .t i iooor inr-ii mgnest in tne iasc, oo.o per cenr.; wuu 1820 to 1830, (30.01 per cent;) and the least from 1830 to 1840, (23.8 per cent.) The average increase of the free colored, on the other hand, has regularly dimin ished nince 1790; being 82, 2 per cent., in the fiast decade, 25.25 in the third, and rising a little in the fourth, it falls in this last to 10. 9G per cent. A fact worth considering as respects the probable des- tiny ot this race In the most favored country of Europe, the report states, the decimal increase is loss t.linn l. no.r cent, nor annum: while j in tlic United States it is 3i- per cent. In forty years, with the present rate of in- ! crease on both continents, the population of the Union will exceed that of England, i France, Spain, Portugul, Sweden, and ! c r l i i i 1 owiGzcnaua coniuinuu. As respects the rate of increase in thc different New England States during, the last ten years, it is greatest iu llhode Isl and (25.57) and least in Vermont (7.59) which is also the least in the whole U nion. What is somewhat remarkable, the rate of increase in the great States of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Maryland j is less than in either Llhode Island or Mas ! sachusetts. I In the whole Union Wisconsin shows j thc greatest ratio, (890.48;) next Iowa, :(345.84;) then Arkansas, (114.85;) and , Michigan (87.33.) j In regard to the number of immigrants, the report goes into an extended, though, as ecni.s to Jf hardly thorough enough (ivnminnnnn I tin pahc ntinn ic r.hfi r. f.nnrn I r ' . -lil ' T t ( aie now, or immigrants ana tneir uescena- ants, since 190 in the Lnion, 4, -joU 9i4 Of these, 1,542,800 arrived during the last ten years, or about double the num ber of the previous decade. Tables are given for the density of pop ulation of the States. Massachusetts and Khode Island are the two most populated the former having 127,49 inhabitants to the square mile; thc latter 112.97. The least are Taxes (0.89 to the square mile; with the whole area it is 7.2. The number of slaves manumitted and escaped during the year ending June, 1850, is given. Thc latter amount in all to 1,011; the former to 1,467. Maryland los.s the most (279,) -then Kentucky (96,) and then Louisiana (90.) Of the manu mitted, Maryland claims 493, Delaware 277, and Virginia 218. Of the slaves in the respective States, lgmia has the largcstnumber 179 the next South Carolina, 384,934; and struggling desperately and finally attemp- They milk their animals summer and win the smallest, Honda, 39,309; and Dela- tin to take lis ., lif. Sfi(Mirefi bnh fm. aml frcezfi the mnk which is set smart ware, 2,2S9 The free colored are most numerous in Maryland 74,077; and in Yirginia, 53,-! a-'cnnsy.vania nas aiso oo ine least numbers are m Iowa, J3o; and.Iex- CS,a ii c ii t r i ,t " i A table of the number of deaths and 1 their ratio to the living in each St: ; been also made. This is a deeply i in each btatc has 1 oil- ' f "fc nmttcr, and it-is to be regretted, for uicwiKooi hc ucu, , unujiKcwiso xor tne sake of national health, that tliere were no more facilities furuished the oftccrs. of the census, ihey have done well, as far as their means would permit Irom this it appears that the two States where the number ot deaths is greatest m proportion to the livinor are Massachu- .'. t , .. : ., Sl'llX UUU MJUlSiaiUl! XlXQ TatlO 111 tUC former being one to every 51.23, and in inn lannr OI1G tO GVGl'V 'l-J-OO. VlSf!fn- 1 .. ..11 1 . in Of llT' sin, Vermont, Iowa, and Florida are ap- .l it 1 . . 1 . 1 . . 1 .1 parentiy tne neaituiest tne average or the eW r i -i . . iorK: 11 onc considers tne terrible mor- - Wehav not snace here te K ' tended conclusions from these interesting J I fill- J ' 1 1 .1 buniiHion iu mo noriucrn otates, ana vei- low fever in the southern. It appears, ton. flint. t.linVnlf? nnnnhln nlimitn r f Vn J ' " "" v-l- mont and AVisconsin, and the mild equa- f Die climate ot Iowa, lieorgia, and 1'lorida, j are the most favorable to health. A re- , suit agreeing singularly with the late in- ' vestigations upon "The relation of climate ' to tubercular diseases;" put forth in thc 'Boston Medical Journal. . in these tables the. average forMinnc- sota. and Oregon is-very large; double 'thatiof any of the States. But we may conclude in such distant and unsettled .territories the returns would hardly be ex- TZ'XTZr. iuij tiicrc can uu jitiiu uuumu mate of our Pacific coast is much more ; favorable, on the whole, to health, than that of our Atlantic coast. As regards the press, the result of the census speaks well for the intelligence ot our people. The whole number of papers and periodicals in the United btates m June 1, 1850, was 2,800; circulation, 5,- uuu,uuu, ana tne numoer oi uopiw iim- ; l.i - tar nnnnn v AV1; mill llllll . u.v, For the very important statistics of man- ufactures and agriculture, wc can give o o ; uuo iv uiiui sudvic, The entire capital invested in m ' anutac- tures in the United States is estimated I in round numbers at , Taiue of raw material Amount paid for hbor : A'aluc of manufactured i articls oJoOOOOOO uuuu i non inn nnn 1,020,.JUU,U0U Number of persons cm- Py l,0o0,00U,00U In the manufacture colton goods, Mas - sachusetts stands first; New Hampshire SCCOnd, and Bhodc Island third Penn- I svlvauia followinc: next. Tn Woollcn "oads. Massachusetts first; York second; Connecticut third, and Pennsylvania fourth. J in the manufacture of pig iron, Penn - svivania produces (in value) about half .. i i -i t .1 rt-. Al.: tne wnoio prouuciion or me union, wmu stands second, and Maryland third. In castings, New York prodeces the greatest value; then Pennsylvania, follow- ed by Ohio and Massachusetts. O f wrought iron, Pennsylvania works rather more than half thc product of the 1 cular and of a lighter complexion, than whole Union; followed by New York, Yir- the rest. Those of Sweden and Norway giuia and Ohio. j are to some extent more cultivated, enter- ln the production, of malt and spiritu- j prising and industrious than those ofBus ous liquors New York has thc greatest sia, and make light of thc greatest priva capital invested; the next Pennsylvania, tions and hardships. The richest of the and thc next Ohio. latter have not more than 800 reindeer, In agricultural productions, Pennsylva- j while the former possess from 2,000 to nia produces thc greatest number of bush- j 3,000. In Sweden and Norway, whoev els of wheat. Ohio, and then New York, ; er owns from 400 to .500 passes for a man and then Yirginia, closely follow. in moderate circumstances ; with 200 a The first wool producing State is Ohio, j small family with proper prudencecanlive and next New York. j without suffering from want but less than Of live stock, New York has the great- ' this number plunges a family into all the est value; next Ohio, and next Pennsylva- ! troubles of poverty. Whoever has not nia. Ohio produces the most icinc followed by Pennsylvania, and then Illinois. In hemp, Kentucky leads: followed by Missouri. Of maple sugar, New York shows thc t Fish, game, and thc flesh of the rein greatest production, and Vermont the j deer are the usual food of the Lapps. next. Incanc sugar; Louisiana produces near- ly three quarters of the production of the whole Union; Flori da is sccon'd. In Ivomc-madc manufactures Tennessee leads. This "abstract" is probably only an imperfect specimen of the census. There are evideut defects in it of arrangement; stiil it shows very great research and pa- j tience of investigation, for which all grat- I ihiflfi should hn shown. Tliprn 1ms hnnti i j -m our C0URtry a narrow prejudice against extended investigations of this kind. ti-scorbutic. They are very fond of salt. We hope this is past. A nation in the and eat nothing uncooked. Their cook position of ours, both for the sake of thc i cry is all done in untiuncd copper ves- historian and for the interests of science, should allow the most minute research are no pewterers ; more probably, howev into particular of its wonderful resources 1 it is a long-descended custom, since in all and its material progress. Many a vital Northern Asia thc use of copper was for question in medical, economical, and pol- mcrly universal, and the art of overlay itical science, may be settled by these ing that metal .could hardly be known by laboriously gathered statistics. The den of some Counterfeiters of gold coin was discovered and broken up, in i the basement of No. 9 Ilanimcrsly j street, N. Y., a few days ago. The place j was ostensibly occupied as an engraver's j door and card plate establishment. Sev- eral olliccrs suspecting the real nature ot their business, proceeded there and arres- t ted Louis Burry, a Frenchman, who was fllf nnl V Tiorcnn nrosnnl onrl lir nffnr he is believed to be only a workman for others who arc still at large. The ofii- ccrs found a complete set of implements for counterfeiting -old dollars and sovcr- ; eigns . thesc consisted of a large prcsS) a f galvanic battery, and set of dies, finely ,i.;,. i.i ,in '. :u an unfinished state for making sovcr- . Cigns :. a larfrc nuantitv of shent brass. from which thousands of counterfeit gold ' . a i. J dollars had been made, together with ' chi3eL & of evc dcscriptfon suitablc to the purposc. T( alsJ found about 75 counterfeit gold dollars, and a large numbcr in an ufinishfld sta'tc. The fd dollars are beautifully executed, and cx- i ....n ' .i Ti ? Li-' t , , . . - .ucuulvc xi is uuuuvcu nine tnousanus ; do "well to bo on their tuard in rob - ' i' ,t o ' ; IAlu in Now Voiif : llie 'liixpress.' sneaking of the ramd & 4 1, Q th growtli of New York, says : f " Another HOVnl fn.it.nrn nf thn mix? ?s ' , , the untter-ground building which is going ?n,Jb.ut uS; I.me parts of the city, r" . 1ZTS XlT. ward are lighted from above, and here at i . rooms are below the surface or the earth. The printing rfJiTriy f nrni-n-. n 1. nrA uug(.liuoi u. SUUlKUllUUilU IJIISIJIUS3, thousands of people, too. live in the first ' and second basement or cellars, and some of them far into thc bowels of the earth, j Wo arc often thankful that New York, crowded and walled in as it is, has a hole in tho top, from which descend a little of I find's AnxrV,r,ut ,fnr if it. hnd not. wW. j would become of us?" ... a i Laplaud and its Inhabitants, We translate and condense for The Tribune the following interesting particu- lass, drawn from recent North Russian i. f - "J and P"u taint known The number of fche Russian Lap doM nQfc cxcced 2000 . those of Swediah L !and werc estimated in 1844 at 4,000, and thogc of Northern Norway 5,000 an a, ate of only 11000 souls. Besides the Lapp populatioilj tliere are tobe found Qn the gbore of the white gea several afreg of EussianSj stretching along from Kerett to the Bay of Kandalasch for Can- -. . i- . ii . . ii .-.V . ualax). xsetween tne Tillage or ivandal- 8ohka and Kola, on the coast at the mouth c t m nnimna a distance of 1 3 worato ot the louioma, a distance or -id wersts, (1 41 miles,) there are seven post stations, f ,n;inc fininc carried from one in nwT, ntrloofmir nf whiMi nn;m,ia kent at each station. This mode of traus- Prt b0TVeVCr' iS ony. emPcd in n- ter; in summer everything being transpor- ted firsfc a few railes b land to Lake Im' , , , , j , fch f th . fi ; body of water,some60 miles, thence across tQ thc 1Vivcr Toulomaj and down that ' stream to Kola. The navigation of tho Lake, bv the wav. is not alwavs free from i danger. to The lanffuaire of the LanDs is similar to that of the Finns, from which race thev , are originally an offshoot. The Lapps in general are of middle statue. They ' have large heads, short necks, small brown rcd eyes, owing to the constant smoke in ' ., i . i i i ii ,ii i tneir nuts, ntgii cnecK nones, tnin nearus and large hands. Those of Norway are distinguished from the Russian Lapps, by j the blackness, luxurience and gloss of their hair ; the more northern portion of the race are somewhat larger, more mus more tnan ou, auus nis ueru to tuat. oi .1 r T "l 1 . l "1. .t f some rich man, and becomes his servant almost his slave, and is bound in the prop er season to follow him to the hunting or fishing grounds. Bread they never eat, though ot the ryo i meal, which they procure in Kola or of j the fisherman in barter for the products of their reindeer herds, they make a sort of flat or pan cakes mingling thc meal j with thc pounded bark of trees. For this purpose the meal is first soaked in cold ; water, and the cakes baked upon a hotiron. j They are eaten with butter or codfish oil, which is esteemed a great luxury. The mingling of the bark with the meal is not ' ilnno. merelv for the sake of economy, the i J ' Lapps considering it an excellent and an sels, perhaps because in all Lapland there the rude inhabitants. Nevertheless cases ; of poisoning from the copper never occur, being rendered impossible by the perfect cleanliness of the copper vessels, which af- ter every meal are scoured with sand till they shine like mirrors. Besides, after the food is sufficiently cooked it is imme- diatcly poured into wooden vessels of home manufacture. I The Norwegian and Swedish Lapps make cheese of the reindeer milk, and rirnfiill-ir cmrn f nr ncn nil f Tin rt-lirt t- .?- ' for cheese. The women consider this as ' a great luxury. It is remarkable for its pleasant odor, and has a ready sale in Norwav at a rather bih nrice. The Bus ! sian Lap?s have no ide 0f making cheese from their reindeer milk, although the 1 .r. a .7' i. ia ! of great advantage to them. This milk 1 is distmnrnisherl for its excellent flavor: in ; 1 o ' color and consistency it is like thick cream from thc milk of cows, and is remarkably nourishing. JUST Thc gold diggings of Australia, according to reliable intelligence, yield much more profusely than those of Cali fornia. The latest news from thafc conti nent is to thc 31st of August. During a single week in July as much as 125,000 ounces of gold dust were brought into Mel bourne Port Philip, which at a valuation of 20 per oz., gives a weekly product of two and a half millions of dollars. Of course, this rate did not hold through th month, but the aggregate was not short of 400,000 ounces, or $8,000,000. Expensive Boarding. In an article relating to tho Metropolitan Hall, New York, the "Iugleside" says: 'In the matter of prices, few pay less than $25 per week, and one foreign emis sary, who has taken rooms for the season, is paying at the rate of thirty dollars per day, besides a very liberal extra expendi ture for tho very choicest antique wines. One gentleman pays $50 per week. Tho billaiof .othara amount to 8200, 8250 and 300 per week.