ALPHABETICAL LIST OF ARTICLES.
Wliich have received the decision of the Commissioner of Customs, as to their liability to duty under the present tariff. COMPfLED FROM OFFICIAL SOURCES Agricultural implements, free Almonds, shelled and in husk, free Anchovies, 4s per cubic foot Arrowroot, free Axles, cart and dray, iron (loose) free Bathbricks, free Bedsteads (iron), 3s per cwt Bellows (forge), freeBiscuits (fancy), free Bitters (orange), 9s per gallon* Capers, 4s per cubic foot Carraway seeds, free Carriage, lamps, 3s per cwt. Chains (with anchor* or for ship* use free Chain (all other), Ss per cwt. Cherry cordials, ys per gallon* Cheese, free Clocks, free Coffee, essence of, free Corrugated iron sheets, free Cotton wick, free Curry powder, free Eau de Cologne, 9s per gallon j Fencing wire and standards (iron) free j Fish, preserved, free ! Flavoring essences,, free J Floor-cloth, free , j Forges and iron-work, loose, 3s per cwt. i Forks, digging and hay, 3s pur cwt. Galvanized iron sheets, free f , „ wire, free „ „ ware as buckets, gutter ter angles, ridge caps, tiles, and ornamental pieces, 3s per cwt Gelatine, free Oin ger bread, free Ginger cordials, 9s per gallon* Croats, free Gun barrels, 5s each f (Juita percha, free J Harrows, free Herrings, preserved, free Hops, free Horse shoes, 8s perewt. Huckaback (hemp or flax) per cubic foot Hurdles, iron, free Iron chairs, Ss per cwt „ safes, 3s per cwt „ tanks, free Ir >nwork for chips' use, free Isinglass, free Jams and jollies, -is per cubic foot Jewellery, free Lemon and lime juice, free Linseed oil, free Lobsters, preserved, free Maccaroni, 4s per cubic foot Machinery, agricultural or other, free Meats, potted or preserved, free Night lights, free Oatmeal . free Oilcloth, free „ table covers, 4s per pubic foot Olive oil (perfumed), free Olives, 4s per cubic foot Orange bitters, Us per gallon* Oysters, preserved, free Paint, free Pearl barley, freo Ploughs, free Kick cloth, free § Safes, iron, 3s per cwt Sago, free Salad oil, 4s per cubic foot Sail, free Sardines, 4s per cubic foot S;is!i weights, 3s per ewt Scythes, 3$ per cwt Sheaves, brass, for ships' use, free Shot, free Shovels, 3s per cwt. Soda, free Soda crystals, free Sonps (fish and vegetable, preserved) freo Spades, 3s per cwt. Starch, free Steel (bar), free Syrups, free Table covers (oilcloth), 4s per cubic foot Tanks (iron), free Tapioco, free Tarpaulins, free Tiles, iron, 3s per cwt. Tinman's tools, 3s per cwt Vermicelli, 4s per cubic foot Vesta matches ( wax), free Vinegar( in any package or vessel), free Watches, free Wick, cotton, free Whiting, free Winnowing cloths, free} Wire, iron fencing, free Wire, small (as bell wire), 3s per cwt. * Orange Bitters, Cherry and Ginger Cordials, &c , are liable t.o duty at 9s per J gallon. But if the importer make a decla- j ration, and the Collector certify that these ! goods do not contain more than 10 percent, of spirit, they may, upon application to the Commissionerof Customs, be admitted ; at 4s per cubic foot. _ j t Importation of Arms, &c, without ( license is a misdemeanor, punishable by j fine or imprisonment. j I A manufacture composed @f any of the articles comprised in Section 7* and in which gutta percha is used merely to make it waterproof, is chargeable with 4s per cubic foot. § When the fabric is not superior to ordinary sail-cloth.
Freemasonry. — Freemasonry is essentially mystical, but if you cannot see this for yourself it would be useless for us toattempt to tell you even if we could put Su -h proofs in priut. In all ages of the world mysticism has been popular because it is a branch ofthe fanciful, and its direction is so marked, its spirit so well understood, or rather, so specific, that there is little difficulty in recognising it whenever we meet with it. Fancy may fiind its congenial sphere in the mere interpretation of the letter, but mysticism goes beneath the letter, and takes new views of the nature of things. A mystic claims an/ inward spiritual sense, some peculiardivine endowment, some clue to the' unseen and the heavenly, beyond that which other men enjoy. Perhaps the highest type cf modern "mysticism is Swedenborgianisra, whose disciples find arcana, secrets,, mysteries, double meanings, and hidden traths, everywhere. Mysticism is in relatUn to belief or knowledge, romance founded on earl events, and colored by a pecu'iar school of thought, more allied to a religious poetical enthusiasm than anything wecandescribe ; notwithstanding all this, sonit ofthe greatest mystics bave been Freemasons, and Freemasonry without mysticism would be a nullity. — Freemasons Magazine. A Dutiful Son. — " How dd are ye ?" said Major Kipling to a dwarfieh young man. " Twenty." — " I wonder youkrent right down ashamed ot being no bigger— you look like a boy of ten."—" All comes jof being a dutiful child"—" How so ?— "When I was ten, father put bis hand on my head, and said, 'Stop there, and be then ran away. Ihave never seen him since ; and! did not think it right in me to go on groiviug without his leave " A premium of £COO is oifered by the ArtUnion of London for a marble group or statue.
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Southland Times, Volume 2, Issue 76, 28 July 1863, Page 6 (Supplement)
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857ALPHABETICAL LIST OF ARTICLES. Southland Times, Volume 2, Issue 76, 28 July 1863, Page 6 (Supplement)
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