— = =~ ' ~*~ = SS —_ — ™_ ; sere Saeqaa"&e “ae oe “ee Breese ss" &- SF Fe eS BT =s 8 er oe SS “as 4% =. a ep he &¢ OL A A A a ENS Nene eDWARD WI ' er EDWARD WHELAN] + UMIMNET. WEEKLY JOURNAL OF POLITICS, LITERATURE AND NEWS. Chis is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, man speak free.——nuriprpes. Vou. V- was unable to conyerse with him. Sometimes he took the in- bint himself ; and when I could not exactly catch his mean- ing, alw ays kindly and laboriously repeated what he had said, THE ROSE. occasionally varying the expression to make it more clear. Down came the rain in the mean time, with its steady, de- Tho following poem by Edmund Waller, ono of tho old termined, mathematical motion — ‘ quick as lightning, but lish poets, 1405-1687, has a sentiment as fine as the flower | Pever ina hurry,’ as the drill-serjeant says—down, down, down lealf in qwett :—~ | — splash, splash, splash — ramble, rumble, ramble: it was Go, lovely rose ! enough to make one mad. The Frenchman gaye a heavy sigh, 10, : vely Por ed and | echoed it; he got up half'a melancholy, half comical Tell her that wastes her time and mo, sinile, which I silat - he shook his head, so did I. «Slow ; That now she knows, | work this!’ I would have said, only it would have been absurd When I resemble her te thee, |in French ; and he looked as if he would fain have given me How sweet and fair she seems to bo. the idiom, if I could have but understood it. At length the | vehicle stopped to take in a passenger Here was a chance. |The new-comer was a plump, portly, handsome dame, who |insinuated herself between my friend and me, and then ex- panded till, what with her and the cushions, we felt uncom- monly uncomfortable. But she wasa German; and when she had recovered breath, she looked first in the face of one, then of the other, and with an alarming sound of ugh—agh—ogh, delivered in the interrogative key, appeared to be endeavour- \ ing to fish out of us whether we could do anything in that line. Bid her come forth, _ The Frenchman said « Je suis fache,’ and ‘ N'entends pas,’ and Suffer herself to be desired, | IT shook my head in despair ; negatives that only excited the And not blush to be admired. | risible faculties of madame, who went on clearing her throat of its German in the midst of explosions of laughter, that made Tell her that’s young, And shuns to have her graces spiced, That had'st thou sprang In deserts where no men abide Thou must have uncommended died. Small is the worth Of beauty from the light retired ; CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MO * Montez, montes ! Sacre !—nous sommes partis! Ye—~e—e !” We bandled him in while the vehicle was actually in mo- tion, and I saw no more of my travelling companion. Gleanings from Inte Papers. PRINCE GORTCHAKOFF’S GENERALSHIP. In the Debats Colonel St. Ange analyses the despatch in which Prince Gortchakoff explains and excuses his late defeat on the Tchernaya. The gallant writer does justice to the con- duct of General Read, so unhandsomely dealt with by one who _ plaeed by aceident er favour above him in the military system | of Russia, was surpassed by him in every qualification of a com- mander. Colonel St. Ange says :— Prince Gortchakoff throws ail the blame of his want of sue- cess on General Read, commander of the 3d corps d’armee, who was killed, and cannot now defend himself. According to | the General-in-chief, General Read ought to have established | 2 numerous artillery before the bridge of Traktir, to command the Fedukhine Hills, whilst an attack was made on Tehorgoun, and to have deployed in line of battle under the protection of his artillery, but not to have attacked the positions before re- ceiving orders, Could, however, Prinee Gortchakoff reason- , ubiy imagine that, on hearing the cannonads, the French and Sardinians would remain in their tents? Has all initiative { NDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1855. SAS SOMA SS RS ao ae cs eae : eeasenanatorcenaracagieianine sm cpenneaperaarnoinreranetnanrittei teeter erate aT i Pe ea going to put their money in banks, for sometimes hanks failed ; they were determined to invest safely ; pat their money in mortgages upon the best improved, well seeured real estate in the city,—sv they went to Sanders, and he did the business for them all. G. Hubert Sanders was now one of onr wealthiest citizexs— certainly the most extravagant. He drove a span of sorrels before a light buggy, in the morning; a span of blace to a handsome rockaway, in the afternoon; and in the evening he sported a carriage and spanking pair of bays. His office hours were shortened from 8 till 5, down from 10 to 2, but between those hours he was always in his office, save at lunch hours, when, if any of his distinguished family were down shopping, he would escort them to the ice-cream saloon, and the skill of the eatcring artists was taxed to the utmost, in providing dainties for them. On one oceasion last year, when strawberries first appeared in the market, it is said himself and Mrs. Wheeler wate the moderate allowance of $100 worth each, atasinglesitting. The stories now told of his lavish extrayagance would fill a large sized octayo. About two weeks ago tie eldest daughter was married to a gentleman of Sacramento. Another magnificent and costly entertainment was given on the occasion. Young wife hunters mourned that there were no more davghters in the family, so that they might form a matrimonial alliance with so distinguished a set. Their soirees outshone those of all others. To be invited at Sanders’ was the zenith of biiss Then die, that she The common fate of all hings rare May read in thee: How small a part of time they sharo That are so woudrous sweet and fair. Yet, though they fade, From thy dead leaves let fragrance risa; And teaen the maid That coodness Time's rude hand defies : That virtue lives whea beauty dies. oe «~sc@ >. - — ~ ’ rAtT FOOTSTEPS OF ANGELS. LY WH. W. LONGFELLOV. When the hours of days are numbered And the voiecs of the nicht Wake the better soul that slumbered, Toa holy calm dk light. Er> the evening lamps are lighted, And like phantoms grim and tall, | our contiguous sides and the cushions undulate in harmony. }1 verily think she considered herself fortunately placed in _ having two listeners with no speaker but herself, fur she rattled | away without intermission, interlarding her speech, in compli- \inent to the Frenchman, with scraps of his own language, so | horribly bad that even I was amused. We stood it for some (time as decently as possible; but at last I could not help | giving my male companion the wink, and saying in an under- | tone * Quelle Francais!’ Both of us proved too much for his politeness: off he set with a roar, in which I joined from sympathy ; and so we went onall talking French and German, without listening to either, and laughing ready to die. | A more interesting episode, however, speedily occurred, for the coach stopped to a late dinner. Meals were a grand in- | vention for that kind of travelling, although they have now gone the way of all horseflesh. To spateh at a morsel as we | do now, and devour it like an ogre, is not to dine; any more | than to scald the mucous membrane all the way down is to get | cheered with the cup that not inebriates. The recollection of that dinner is enough to disgust one with steam and its head- | long haste, and eo us inquire whether it is really the grand | business of human beings to contrive so as to be nowhere at all been ever interdicted to the general of a corps d’armee of from | to all codfishdom. But time works wonders. ‘The mutations 23,000 to 30,000, who, when in a situation to appreciate fa-| of human life are beyoud the power or the prediction of man. vourable circumstances, can seize on them and profit by them ?| Last week G. Hubert Sanders was arrested on a charge of Moments are precious in war. Prince Gortchakoff was then! forgery, and was released upon giving bonds in the sum of at a distance of two kilometres (24 miles) towards Tchorgoun. | $10,000 for his appearance at court to answer the ‘charge. General Read considered the moment opportune for attack, | His son-in-law and his partner were his suretics. That evenn g before the French were fully prepared ; and, besides, by march-| he fled, and has not been heard of. The following day forged ing on the-Mamelons, his attack accorded with the plans of | mortgages and deeds were discovered in his office, upon which the General-in-Chief. Read, in fact, might evidently have | he had raised over $300,000 possessed himself of the Mamelon, since he obtained the sum-| In one instance he actually mortgaged a man’s own property mit of it. It was for the General-in-Chief to support that | to him for $4,000, and strange to tell, the poor fellow never attack, which wus a brilliant one, although repulsed by the | discovered it until the news of the forgeries was two days oid: impetuous bravery of our soldiers. Read returned to the charge, | To some he gave mortgages upon the highway,.the boundaries ) with sufficient force: General Ouschakoff also redoubled his | mortgages upon the property of Bolton P. Bacon, John Par- efforts against the other Mamelon, but there also the Gene- | rott, Sam Brennan, and others of our wealthy men, who ral-in-Chief adopted no decisive measure. Instead of making | never had a dollar upen their estates. Ali these he cony eyed a diversion on our tight, by throwing the corps d’armee o! | to his victims, who paid him their money, gay > him’ his ccm- General Liprandi against Tchorgoun and Hasiort (the key of| mission, and went away confident in the security that heli the battle), he allowed—it is not known why—his left tu re- | their funds. One great cause why he was enabied w continus main unprotected, in order to send, but too late, one of the | his frauds so long undiscovered, is the fact that nearly all his divisions of General Liprandi to the support of the attacks on | sufferers are French, who do not understand our langnage, and and the General-in-Chief did not cause him to be supported | and descriptions being given in the usual style. He also drew Shadows from the fitful firelight, at any given time. The bill of fare included scorees of dishes, Dance upon the parlor wail. in soup, fish, meat, poultry, game, pastry and confections ; all ae / with names that made them ten times more luxurious. yet, I Then the forins of the departed , ust own so unintelligible, that choice was out of the ques- Detetat the enemas 3 ition. I thought of shutting my eyes and taking something at tg hebebed. ‘the trac-beereell. | random ; but a qualin came over me as T reflected on the Scrnesty eiih sania ain , stories 1 had heard of the continental cuisine ineluding frogs, ; snails, and the ox’s liver, called vulgarly in England cat's | }- wif > oo . b -} . Ah, the young and strong, who cherished imeat; I looked at my lrenchman ; but he was looking at me. echt, Tomeinen for the wtrhie | He would not have begun before me for the world ; and when aviriilr vung » * sat 7 tc a = eS a le eel vial lids , : ty : : By the roadxide fell and perished, in hungry impatience, I grasped at something, that turned out Weary with the march of fifo. | to be overdone boiled beef under the name of bouilli, so fur - ‘from staring at me with the contempt I perhaps deserved, he , helped himself largely to the humble fare. Eating, they say, They, the hely ones and weakly, } » cross of suffering bora, Ts ; or tee . Folded their pale bands so meekly, 3 Spoke with us on earth no more, . is naturel, then upon cotelettes de mouton, and then upon the 'gigot, which always comes last. The Frenchman, though looking with an eye of a connoisseur upon the tempting dish- An with them the being beauteous, es around him, was true to his social principles, and followed Whs unto my youth was given, More than all things else to love me, And is now a saint in Heaven. | his fellow-traveller—so that, in the midst of all sorts of deli- _eacies, we made a magnificent meal upon boiled beef and beef | Steaks, mutton chops and leg of mutton. With a slow and noiseless footstep Comes the messenger divine, Takes the vacant chair beside mo, Lays her gentle hand in mine. After all, it was very satisfactory. We felt ourselves ex- | panding, like the German lady—who had now vanished, for she resided at the place, and we looked at each other with increasing kindness and good humour. Suddenly the French- man filled his tumbler half full of wine, and held it out. And she sits and gazes at me, ‘A votre sante! cried he, and in an instant 1 was ready for With thos: deep and tender eyes, him, and brought my glass against his with, I regret to say, Like the stars so still and saint-like, | a fatal collisien, for 1t smashed it in pieces and spilt the wine. Looking downward from the skies, | I was bitterly ashamed of my awkwardness. It was the first : time I had practised the fashion, which they eall tringuer, and should have been more cautious; but the conduct of my com- panion was very admirable. He actually seemed to take it all upon himself, begging my pardon in the humblest manner for the outrage I had committed, in demolishing a man’s glass, who had anerely invited me in a friendly way to take wine O, though oft depressed and lonely, with him. The worst of it was, the waiters and the other All my tears are laid aside, guesis were excessively imprudent; not that they said any- If 1 bat remember only thing—they never do on such oceasions ; but they looked at Such as these have lived and died. Uttered not. yet comprehended, Is the spirit’s voiccless prayer ; Soft rebukes, in blessings ended, Breathing from her lip of air, press a smile. As for the hostess, who had been looking at us a good deal, she covered her face with her handkerchief and (From Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal.) precipitately left the. bar. Both the Frenchman and I were much annoyed, and looked jealously from face to face to watch ly Fellow-traveller and I. for an occasion of hostilities; but by degrees the thing was To say merely that ‘it rained,’ docs not usually describe a , — glass of brandy and water made us all e state e weather. There may have been wind at the) Tight. Cugus, ; ear tine eal the aioaeed have bint a compliment splashed | taken the alcohol neat, - 1 had known his Sansa Cxprees against your face or window; or it may have been bitterly | gte#t disgust at our wea em arm mixture ; but he was a trump euld, and the rain may have counted only as :.n additional dis- | throughout, and no mista oi . comfort. But on the day [ have before my memory, it rained! Our attempts at conversation while we were at table were and did nothing else. There was neither cold nor warmth | Fery few, for I did not like to expose my slight acquaintance enough to divert your feelings ; there was no breath of air to With the language before a mixed company; but when we disturb the perpendicularity of the drops, and no prospect of | were fairly reseated in the coapee, after a plentiful dinner and country you could see through them. Down came the heavy |a reasonable allowance of wine and brandy, we went at it globules in mathematical lines; splash went the water against again with a will. On such occasions, one has a full, com- the level road ; round went the wheels of the vehicle with a/ fortable, jolly feeling, which overthrows the barriers of re- -s2eo o- - —-—--———_—- -_ | wants only a beginning. My next venture was upon biftik en | | Tigidly the tastes, extraordinary as he might think them, of each other, and then bit their lips, and grinned horribly to re- | y the way, that my companion would have | the centre. Disposing of a reserve of 34,000 men, he made no | use of it, though the moment was one of those crisis which | serve to decide victory, or to disengage compromised troops. | | Finally, Prince Gortchakof possessod an immense artillery, | but he only made use of it as a demonstration, and it was the | /artillery of the allies which horribly decimated his columns. | By his indecision he left them to be crushed, losing more than five thousand killed or wounded, amongst whom were | eight generals, three of whom expired on the banks of the | fchernaya. The general, in fact, showed himself, as it were, completely disconeerted on seeing the affair take what he calls an unexpec@l tum, Xs if a general could always count oa in- fallible success, and as if it were not the duty of a General-in- Chief to provide for unseen incidents. He triumphs at the French not having gone to attack him at the other side of the river, where he awaited them, he says, for four hours ; but he feigns to forget that we have another task to fulfil—the siege of Sebastopol. It is for him to eause us to raise the siege, if he ean, with his relieving army. ‘ue day willarrive on which | the allied army will be free in its turn to give him battle in| | the heart of the Crimea. | The Colonel estimates in the following terms the pe nmmen , of General Gortchakoff as the commander-in-chief of a large | | independent body of troops :— “The not very brilliant campaign of this gencral in the , Danubian Principalities against the Turks, and his sad battle | of the Tchernaya, do not permit him to be counted amongst | those captains who are inspired on the battle dield with sadden | illuminations. He may be rather classed amongst the exact, | and even learned taeticians, who know perfeetiy well the mili- tary chess board and its rules, but to whom naiure has refused ithe inspirations of genius. His instractions, found on the body of General Real, are a chef d’euvre of prudent provision ; but we remark in them a spirit of detail ee pe caleu- lated to shackle the talents of those who were to execute them, | by restricting them to petty combinations. This spirit of ex- | actitude and detail does not, it is true, always prevent a gene- ral from conceiving extensive plans; but there is a vast dif. | ference between caim calculation and vigorous execution. In| the field of battle the presence of mind of the moment is the most precious quality, and Marshal Soult said truly that in- ‘spiration is nothing else than calculation instantancously | 'macde.’’ dietitian SKETCH OF A CALIFORNIA MILLIONAIRE. Never was community so convulsed in our young State as it has been during the past month. <A true record of events | ‘throughout the State would put the bursting of the South Sea | Bubble, and the annals of old Newgate to the blush, and Benton's ** Thirty years in the United States Senate” would be but’a primer in comparison of size. Banks failing, crashing, swindling ; merchants suspending | —sume from failure of the banks, others from rash speculations, a few from the absorbing of their whole profits in the pay- ‘ments of high rates of interest, but scarcely one from a fair legitimate cause. New systems of fraud and villainy are almost | | daily exposed, and always does the exposure come just tdo late | to afford justice to arrest the perpetrators. Meiggs—honest | Harry Meiggs—struck out in a somewhat new line, although monotonous rumble ; and away bowled we over the wet, stcam- serve; and fur my own part I talked away as if I was French-! the elegant Wall Street financier, Schuyler, gave him a cue ; | ing, cndless plains of the Netherlands. man born; only a goed deal out in the grammar, and idiom, there was only one passenger with me in the coapee, and and meaning of words. My companion was equally communi- he was worse than nobody by several chalks. Solitude would cative, and although he took great pains with my ignorance, have been endurable ; but to be shut up in compulsory com- but little more intelligible ; and so we _kept hammering at panionship with a man whose language you cannot speak, and one another during the great part of the night, with less success who eaunot speak yours, is dreadtul. I saw the fellow was a than our perseverance deserved. ‘but these two pale before the brilliant accom plishments of the. latest operator—G. Hubert Sanders, l\i-nees for vessels, do; last, do; last blocks, do; jaths do’; This gentleman came to our city, some three years ago, poor. and meck. He hired him a small office, engaged with a | _ partner equally poor, and the two hung out a modest, yellow > all kinds : meats. fresh. smoked 3 lead | ° . = . . rf “ . 1e9 5 ¢ rhe ss i Bt sino 2U Gg £ailec * | painted sign, which told that they were ‘ Attorneys and | state; meas of all kinds ; meats, tresh, smoked and salted ; who were ignorant of the legal procedure in such cases; Every day, so far, has brought to light somo new act of hig villainy. Of all our aplendid rascals, Sanders has proved himself tha chief. His new system of robbery is entitled to the firat rank in the Patent Office of rascality, and old style forgers such os Monroe Edwards was, must not hope for the distinguished re- putation that is 60 richly merited by Sanders, Meigzs and Schuyler. —N. V. Mirror. a ns UNITED STATES, = THE RECIPROCITY TREATY. We are indebted to M. Hi. Perley, Esq., for a expy of the following important circular from the Secretary of the U.S. Treastry, defining what articles shall be free aud what shall pay duty under the Reciprocity Treaty :—- [GENERAL REGULATIONS, No. 55.] Supplementary to Regulations, No 50. ‘TO COLLECTORS AND OTHER OFFICERS OF TOR CUSTOMS, Treascrny Department, July 31, 1806. The following decisions on questions submitted to this Department, arising on importations into the Uffited States ‘from the British Provinces of Canada, New Branswick, Nova Seotia, and DPrince Edward Island, being the product of said Provinces, under the Reciprocity Treaty with Great Britain of June 5, 1855, are communicate! for your infore mation and government :— ENTITLED TO FREE ENTRY. Animals of all kinds; ashes, comprehending pot and pearl ashes; black salts and salts of lye; bogs, barrels, or othor original packages, containing flour, wheat, or other fico products ; barley; bark of hemlock or other trees ; beams, when rough hewn or sawed only; bran; breadstuffs of all kinds, not further manufactured than flour or meal; broom corn; burr stones, hewn or wrought, or unwrought butter; Canada balsam, collected from a species of pine tree, as tur- pentine ; castoreum, a product of the beaver; catiletails, if undressed ; cheese ; clap boards, ifrough hewn or sawed only ; coal; corn, Indian, or maize ; cotton wool; dried fruits ; dye stuffs; fish of all kinds, preducts of fish, and of all other creatures living in the water; the exemption from duty to extend to the fisheries of Newfoundiand and Labrador; fish whoily or partly cooked in cans hermetically sealed ; firewood, flax ; unmauufactured ; flour of all kinds. fresh méat, fructs, dried or undried ; fruits, preserved ia cans hermetical! sealed, furs, undressed; grains of all kinds; grindstoues, hewn or wrought, or unwrought ; ypsum, grounu cr unwroucht ; uur, on the hide or skin. or if thereof, undressed ; hair seal skins, undressed ; hemp unmanufaciured ; hides, undressed ; horas, horn tips; hubs for wheels, if rough hewn or siwed only; ? i ? lard, linseed; lumber ef all kinds; round, rough bewn cr ? ’ . . , sawed only; manures; marble in ils crude or unwrought ° ’ R . . iv. ~ . . . a is ee Loalle . « i] = ser ver tithe yy . Frenchman the moment [ set my eyes on him, and the cool, Even after I fell asleep, the same thing was continued for Counsellors at Law.’? Sanders is “a Frenchman, I believe, seats whoily Or partially couked, pre Sey without = or hence he soon got a very fine practice from his countrymen. ispirits, in caus hermetically sealed; middilings, (a3 flour ;) easy impudence with which he said, ‘ pardon,’ when he hours in my dreams. thought I was speaking against the fuct. My c from an insular blush when I was obliged to try to’ wreak my the liqui thought upon expression. The individual, however, roused | pendicular drops. Whereupon I woke. It was the sound of knocked ay hat from the seat on coming in, confirmed the Frenchman for a wager of a tumbler of wine ; when the con- | He had marrie nowledge of French had been acquired at school, | test was over, we each claimed to be the winner ; and while and went only as fur as reading ; and I could not yet refrain stru ting for the prize, the glass smashed in our hands, and | an American lady in one of the eastern citics, | nuts; oats; oat meal; oi] from fish; ores of metals, of z!t a widow, the mother of two girls; one of dazzling beauty. kinds; palings, pickets, posts, &e., if rough hewn or sawed The family removed to this city. The wonderful beauty of the and aristocracy of our city. A’ smile from the luyely fair one Sai les alates lel oT beh : : i ; . va ‘only ; pates or scraps of raw hides or skins ; pearl and potash ; descended ever the whole earth in great, round per- | daughter drew to their house crowds of admirers—the wealth | peas ; peits; pitch; plants ; potaices; poultry, cooked, wholly . : : 1 says ce eee | vartly, preserved in cans hermetically sealed ; products of me. | looked upon him somehow as on authorised intruder ;| the rain that was in my ears, mingled with other noises — _was a bliss to ponder on. With increased practice in his pro- | 0F partly. * a heats na pee ae ao! Sean and it was with a reckless air | made « remark to him in his down, down, down—splash, splash, splash -— rumble, rumble, fession, Sanders plunged out in truly fashionable style. His fish und all other creatures living in ue water; | , | handsome daughter, in winning suitors to herself, brought’ from wheat or other grain ; rage; railroad ties, rough, hewn own language about the weather — just to show him that I rumble. Presently the couch stopped : we had arrived at the. could speak French if I choose, and I didn’t care a snap of my , town where I was to Jose my companion. finger whether it was good or bad. I think [ said, *Quelie| He was no more than in time for the vehicle by which he | pluse.’ I encountered his eyes, however, at the moment, and was to turn off into another route ; and when I stood to sce & quiet smile es he muttered, ‘ Mauvais temps,’ demolished me. him mount, holding my umbrella over his head, it was with I had fallen, doubtless, into some unhappy cacology ; and we real emotion I bade him farewell. I could not help thinking both looked out of the window at the rain—I to conceal my at the moment what a pleasant time we might have passed, confusion, and he, of course, to conceal a sneer, with all the and what a permanent friendship we might have formed, bad distressing politeness of his countrymen. we only understood one another's language well enough to A situation of this kind is the more embarrassing that one converse freely. feels obliged to say something. Here was a man, a well dressed, an Good-by,’ said I ; ‘ God bless you !’ respectable, nay rather a gentlemanly person, with intelligent | _* What! cried he, in the same tongue, ‘are you an Eng- eyes that seemed to understand me ; and to sit alone with him, | lishman?’ , hour after hour, all day and all night, without opening an ‘To be sure! and you! O Jupiter—Jovis—Jovi—Jovem— ife did ; | Jupiter—Jove !” | lips, was impossible. felt this himself, I was sure he for whenever 1 made an attem t, he listened earnestly, as if} * Monte! mounsieur, montez ! shouted the coachman. anxious to know what I would be at, without troubling me to| ‘ Whata terrible mistake! But you speak the language so repeat, and then oped in a few words, as if unwilling to ex- admirably’ hibit any colloqui fellow, end to he more and more sorry and ashamed that I an cld experienced Frenchman—quite a’ superiority. I at last hegan to like the ‘I! I never tried it till a few days ago, while you scamed | i 5 other in gaining his confidence and friendship, the better to | succeed in their suit for the danghter. Soon the family beeame | noted in high circles, and some even assigned to them the front. rank among the ton. They rode in the finest carriage in briefs to her father, as her admirers equally rivalled cach or sawed only ; raw hides and skins or parts thereof; rice; : . ' ¥ . ita) al rottenwood, salted meats, salts of lye and black salts, (sce ashes ;) sausage and sausage meat; saw logs ; scaniling, rough, } hewn or sawed only, screenings from grain ; seeds; shingles, town, had the best horses, and plunged into all the extravagance - rough, hewn or sawed only ; shingle bults, do; ae. - ood, essential to support their newly assumed position. The beauty | do; shrubs; skins or tails, und:essed.; skies or parts ¢ vereof, married a lawyer of some wealth, a Mr. Alfred Wheeler. | undressed ; shipstuils ; breadstuffs ; slite; spars, réund and ‘the party given on the occasion eclipsed anything of the sort sawed ouly ; spokes of wheels, if rough hewn or sawed only ; ever known in the country. ; . With the accumulation of business, Sanders felt it necessary | to purchase the appointment of Notary Public, merely to facilitate his own practice, for he was now a conveyaneer, and °% ‘stone, ia its crude or unmanufactured siate; tails, undressed ; tallow; tar; timber of all kinds, round, rough, hewn or sawed ily; tobaceo, unmanufactured ; tow, do; trees, turpentine, . ") ved i "aus here loaned other people’s money on the best secured real estate ; vegetables, wholly or partly cooked, spent caus ber and, by having authority to take the acknowledgments of metically sealed ; venison; wool, unmanulacturce, the borrowing and loaning parties in his office, he was saved | tie trouble and annoyance of running here and thero to affix | the notarial seal. did the largest business of the kind in town. Frenchmen especially ¢ edinhim. Thoy were not boards, (see LIABLE TO DUTY UNDER JHE EXISTING BEVENUE LAWS. timber and Jumber ;) bear’s grease ; beeswax ; ah aber pe lumber ;) biscuit; bread; cakes SME sapobigae re opm et SORE eee ae a aha . bia ee so it i I in a i i i : :