U 8 9 4- ■ B 8 Cornell University Library HJ6085 1894.B8 The Wilson tariff bill as Pffse"ted to t 3 1924 014 051 449 Energy. Bconomy. Despatch. THE ^^^'^'^ 3^ Wilson Tariff Bill as presented to the House of "Representatives Together NA^ith an 7^'phabetical List shoNA^ing Proposed /New Duty. Published by P. B. VANDKGRIFT & CO., New York. Philadelphia. Energy. Economy. Despatch. Our Organization, experience and energy have placed us as Custom House Brokers and General Forwarders without a superior. We will publish a preliminary edition of the new Tariff, arranged alphabetically, with copious annotations, immediately after passage. Neither time nor expense will be spared in making this work the greatest of publications, invaluable to all having deal- ings with the tariff, either as official, importer or otherwise. R B. VANDEGRIFT & CO., NEW YORK , PHILADELPHIA 27 William Street. 50 South Fourth Street. Energy. Economy, Despatch. For the First Time a digest of a proposed Tariff Bill, as presented by Ways and Means Committee, is given to the public before the same has been debated by Congress. Many articles in the Wilson Bill (like all tariff bills) are not mentioned specifically, hence, in our judgment, the schedules are based upon decisions of the Courts, General Appraisers and Treasury Department. We furnish first the Wilson Bill in full, and show the para- graph opposite the name of the article under which it is placed by us, so that (if you desire) you may draw your own conclusions. R B. VANDEGRIFT & CO., NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA 27 William Street, 50 South Fourth Street. ....I/NDEX. Schedule A Chemicals, Oils and Paints. Page ?• B Earths, Earthenware and Glassware. Page 6. C Metals, and Manufactures of. Page 8. D Wood, and Manufactures of. Page II. E Sugar. Page II. F Tobacco and Manufacturers of. Page II. G Agricultural Products and Provisions. Page 12. H Spirits, Wines and other Beverages. Page '3- I Cotton Manufactures. Page '?' J Flax, Hemp and Jute and Manufactures of Page i6. K Wool, and Manufactures of Wool. Page 17.. L Silk, and Silk Goods. Page 18. M Pulp, Papers and Books. Page 19. N Sundries. Page 19. ii Explosive Substances. Page 20. (( Jewelry and Precious Stones. Page 20. t( Leather and Manufactures of. Page 20. (.( Miscellaneous Manufactures. Page 21. Free List. Page 22. Administration. Page 3'- Copyright 1894, by F. B. Vandegrift & Cc. New York. Philadelphia. S3d COHGRESS, II <-) fi ^ C^ ft 2d Session. T1. r\. *+00*+. (Report No. 234.) IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTAllVES. December 19, 1893. Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the state of the Union and ordered to be printed. Mr. Wilson, of West Virginia, from the Committee on Ways and Means, introduced the following bill : A BILL To reduce taxation, to provide revenue for the Government, and for other purposes Be it enacted by the Seiiate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, that On and after the first day of June, eighteen hundred and ninety-four, unless otherwise specially provided for in this act, there shall be levied, collected, and paid upon all articles imported from foreign countries, and mentioned in the schedules herein contained, the rates of duty which are, by the schedules and paragraphs, respectively prescribed, namely : Schedule A. — Chemicals, Oils, alum, sulphate of alumina, and alu- AND Paints. minus cake, and alum in crystals or Acids: — ground, twent}^ per centum ad valo.- 1. Acetic or pyroligneous acid, rem. twenty per centum ad valorem. 8. Blacking of all kinds, twenty 2. Chromic acid, ten per centum ad- per centum ad valorem. valorem. 9- Refined borax, twenty per cen- 3. Citric acid, twenty per centum tum ad valorem. ad valorem. 10. Chalk, prepared, precipitated, 4. Tannic acid or tannin, thirty- French, red, and all other chalk pre- five cents per pound. parations not specially provided for in 5. Tartaric acid, twenty per centum this act, twenty per centum ad valor- ad valorem, em. 6. Alcoholic perfumery, including 11. Chloroform, twenty five cents cologne water and other toilet waters, per pound. and alcoholic compounds not specially Coal -Tar Preparations. — provided for in this act, two dollars 12. All coal-tar colors or dyes, by per gallon and twenty-five per centum whatever name known, and not speci- ad valorem. ally provided for in this act, twenty 7. Alumina, ten per centum ad per centum ad valorem. valorem; alum, alum cake, patent 13. Collodion and all compounds e. B. Vandegrift & Co. of pyroxyline, bj' whatever name known, forty cents per pound; rolled or in sheets, but not made up into arti- cles, fift3^ cents per pound; if in fin- ished or partly finished articles, torty- five per centum ad valorem. 14. Coloring for brandy, wine, beer, or other liquors, fifty per centum ad- valorem. 15. Ethers, sulphuric, thirty-five cents per pound; spirits of nitrous ether, twenty cents per pound; fruit ethers, oils, or essences one dollar per pound; ether of all kinds not specially provided for in this act, one dollar per pound. 16. Extracts and decoctions of log- wood and other dyewoods, extract of sumac, and extracts of barks, such as are commonly used for dyeing or tan- ning, not specially provided for in this act, and extracts of hemlock bark, ten per centum ad valorem. 17. Gelatine, glue, isinglass or fish glue, and prepared fish sounds, twenty- bve per centum ad valorem. 18. Glycerine, crude, not purified, one cent per pound; refined, three cents per pound. 19. Ink and ink powders, printers' ink, and all other ink not specially provided for in this act, twenty per centum ad valorem. 20. Iodoform, one dollar per pound. 21. lyicorice, extracts of, in paste, rolls, or other forms, five cents per pound. 22. Magnesia, carbonate of, medi- cinal, three cents per pound; calcined, seven cents per pound. 23. Morphia, or morphine, and all salts thereof, fifty cents per ounce. Oils. — 24. Alizarine assistant, or soluble oil, or oleate of soda, or Turkey red oil, thirty per centum ad valorem. 25. Castor oil, thirty -five cents per gallon . 26. Cod-liver oil, twenty per cen- tum ad valorem. 27. Flaxseed or linseed and poppy- seed oil, raw, boiled or oxidized, fif- teen cents per gallon of seven and one- half pounds weight. 28. Fusel oil, or aroylic alcohol, ten per centum ad valorem. 29. Hemp-seed oil and rape-seed oil, ten cents per gallon. 30. Olive oil, fit for salad purposes, thirty-five cents per gallon. 31. Peppermint oil, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 32. Seal, herring, whale, and other fish oil not specially provided for in this act, twenty -five per centum ad valorem . 33. Opium, aqueous extract of, for medicinal uses, and tincture of, as laudanum, and all other liquid pre- parations of opium, not specially pro- vided for in this act, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 34. Opium containing less than nine percentum of morphia, and opium prepared for smoking, six dollars per pound; but opium prepared for smok- ing and other preparations of opium deposited in bonded warehouses shall not be removed therefrom without pay- ment of duties, and such duties shall not be refunded. Paints, colors, and varnishes. — 35. Baryta, sulphate of , or barytes, manufactured, three dollars per ton. 36. Blues, such as Berlin, Prus- sian, Chinese, and all others, contain- ing ferrocyanide of iron, dry or ground in or mixed with oil, six cents per pound; in pulp or mixed with water, six cents per pound on the material contained therein when dry. 37. Blanc-fixe, or satin white, or artificial sulphate of barytes, twenty- five per centum ad valorem. 38. Black, made from bone, ivory, or vt getable, under whatever name known, including bone black and lampblack, dry or ground in oil or water, twenty per centum ad valorem. 39. Chrome yellow, chrome green, and all other chromium colors in which lead and bichromate of potash or soda are component parts, dry or ground in or mixed with oil, or in pulp or mixed with water, two and one- quarter cents per pound on the mate- rial contained therein when dry. 40. Ocher and ochery earths, sienna and sienna earths, umber and umber earths, ground in oil, one and one- fourth of one cent per pound. 41 . Ultramarine blue, whether dry, in pulp, or mixed with water, and wash blue containing ultramarine, twenty per centum ad valorem. 42. Varnishes, including so-called gold size or japan, twenty -five per F. B. Vandegrift & Co. centum ad valorem ; and on spirit, var- nishes for the alcohol contained therein, one dollar and thirty-two cents per gallon additional. 43. Vermilion red, and other col- ors containing quicksilver, dry or ground in oil or water, twenty per centum ad valorem ; vermilion red, not containing quicksilver but made of lead or containing lead, six cents per pound. 44. Whiting and Paris white, dry, and ground in oil, or putty, twenty- five per centum ad valorem. 45. Zinc, oxide of, and white zinc paint or pigment, dr^'or ground in oil, twenty per centum ad valorem. 46. All other paints, colors, and pigments, whether dry or mixed, or ground in water or oil, or other solu- tions, including all colors in tubes, lakes, crayons, smalts, and frosting'*, and not specially provided for in this act, twent3'-five per centum ad valo- rem. Lead products. — 47. Acetate of lead, white, two and three-quarters cents per pound ; brown, one and three-quarters cents, per pound ; litharge, one and one-half cents per pound. 48. Nitrate of lead, one and one- half cents per pound. 49. Orange mineral, one and three- quarters cents per pound ; red lead, one and one-half cents per pound. 50. White lead, and white paint and pigment containing lead, dry or in pulp, or ground or mixed with oil, one- and one-half cents per pound. 51. Phosphorus, twenty -five per centum ad valorem. Potash. — 52. Bichromate and chromate of, twenty per centum ad valorem. 53. Hydrodate, iodide, and iodate of, twenty- five cents per pound. 54. Nitrate of, or saltpeter, refined, one-half of one cent per pound. 55. Prussiate of, red, or yellow, twenty per centum ad valorem. Preparations. — 56. All medicinal preparations, in eluding medicinal proprietary prepara- tions, of which alcohol is a compo- nent part, or in the preparation of which alcohol is used, not specially provided for in this act, fifty cents per pound : Provided, That no such pre- paration shall pay less than twenty - five per centum ad valorem. 57. All medicinal preparations, not specially provided for in this act, twenty -five per centum ad valorem. 5 8 . Products or preparations kno wn as alkalies, alkaloids, distilled oils, es- sential oils, expressed oils, rendered oils, and all combinations of the foregoing, and all chemical compounds and salts, not speciallj- provided for in this act, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 59. Preparations used as applica- tions tothehair, mouth, teeth, or skin, such as cosmetics, dentifrices pastes, pomades, powders, and all toilet pre- parations, and articles of perfumery, not specially provided for in this act, forty per centum ad valorem. 60. Santonine, and all salts thereof containing eighty per centum or over of santonine, ooe dollar per pound. Soap. — 61. Castile soap, twenty per centum ad valorem ; fancy, perfumed, and all descriptions of toilet soap, thirty -five per centum ad valorem ; all other soaps, not specially provided for in this act, ten per centum ad valorem. Soda. — 62. Bicarbonate of soda or super- carbonate of soda or saleratus, one- half cent per pound. 63. Hydrate of, or caustic soda, one-half of one cent per pound. 64. Bichromate and chromate of,, twenty per centum ad valorem. 65. Sal soda, or soda crystals, one- eighth of one cent per pound; soda a,sh, one-fourth of one cent per pound. 66. Silicate of soda, or other alka- line silicate, one-fourth of one cent per pound. 67. Sponges, ten per centum ad valorem. 68. Strichnia, or strychnine, and all salts thereof, thirty per centum ad- valorem. 69. Sulphur, sublimed, or flowers of, twenty per centum ad valorem. 70. Sumac, ground, ten per centum ad valorem. 71. Tartar, cream of, and patent tartar, twenty -five per centum ad valo- rem. 7 2 . Tartars and lees cry stals , p ar tly refined, twenty -five per centum ad valorem. 73. Tartrate of soda, and potassa. F. B. Vandegrift & Co. or Rochelle salts, ten per centum ad valorem. Schedui!ly : And provided further , That th^-re shall be no constructive or o her "allowance for breakage, leakage, or damage on wines, liquors, cordials, or distilled spirits. Wines, cordials, brandy, and other spirituous liquors imported in bottles or jugs shall be packed in packages containing not less than one dozen bottles or jugs in each package, or duty shall be paid as if such pack- age containel at least one dozen bottles .or jugg. 243. Ale, pnrter, and beer, in bottles or jugs, thirty cents per gallon,- but no separate or additional duty shall be assessed on the bot'les or jugs; otherwise than in bottle or jugs,, fifteen cents per gallon. 244. Malt extract, including all preparations bearing the name and commercially known as such fluid, in casks, fifteen cents per gallon; in bottles or jugs, thirty cents per gallon; solid or condensed, thirty per centum' ad valorem. 245. Cherry juice and prune juice or prune wine, and other fruit juice not specially provided for in this act, con- taining eighteen per centum or less of alcohol, fifty cents per gallon ; if con- taining more than eighteen per centum of alcohol, one dollar and eighty cents per proof gallon. 246. Ginger ale or ginger beer, twenty per centum ad valorem, but no separate or additional duty shall be assessed on the bottles. 247. All imitations of natural min- eral waters, and all artificial mineral F. B. Vandegrift & Co. waters, thirty per centum ad valorem. Schedule I — Cotton Manufac- tures. 248. Cotton thread, yarn, warps, or warp j'-arn, whether single or ad- vanced beyond the condition of single by grouping or twisting two or more single yarns together, whether on beams or in bundles, skeins, or cops, or in any other form, except spool- thread of cotton, hereinafter provided for, valued at not exceeding twelve cents per pound, twenty per centum ad valorem ; valued at over twelve cents per pound and not exceeding twenty cents per pound, twenty-five per cen- tum ad valorem ; valued at over twenty cents per pound and not exceeding thirty cents per pound, thirty per cen- tum ad valorem ; valued at over thirty cents per pound and not exceeding forty cents per pound, thirty -five per centum ad valorem ; valued at over forty cents per pound, forty per centum ad va- lorem . 249. Spool thread of cotton, con- taining on each spool not exceeding one hundred yards of thread, four and one-half cents per dozen ; exceeding one hundred yards on each spool, for every additional one hundred yards of thread or fractional part thereof in ex- cess of one hundred yards, four and one-half cents per dozen spools. 250 Cotton cloth not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed , and not exceeding fifty threads to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, one cent per square yard ; if bleached, one and one-fourth cents per square yard ; if dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, two cents per square 3'ard. 251. Cotton cloth not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted or printed, exceeding fifty and not exceed- ing one hundred threads to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, one and one-fourth cents per square yard ; if bleached, one and one-half cents per square yard ; if dyed, 'colored, stained, painted, or printed, two and three-fourths cents per square yard. Provided, That on all cotton cloth not exceeding one hundred threads to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, valued at over six and one-half cents per square yard, twenty per centum ad valorem ; bleached, valued at over nine cents per square yard, twenty-five per centum ad valorem ; and dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed valued at over twelve cents per square yard, there shall be levied, collected, and paid a duty of thirty per centum ad valorem. 252. Cotton cloth, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, exceeding one hundred and fifty threads to the square inch, count- ing the warp and filling, one and one- half cents per square yard; if bleached, two and one-half cents per square yard; if dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, three and one-half cents per square yard: Provided ,Thait on all cot- ton cloth exceeding one hundred and not exceeding one hundred and fifty threads to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, valued at over seven and one- half cents per square yard, twentj'-five per centum ad valorem; bleached, valued at over ten cents per square yard, thirty per centum ad valorem; dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, valued at over twelve and one-half cents per square yard, there shall be levied, collected, and paid a duty of thirty-five per centum ad va- lorem . 253. Cotton cloth, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, exceeding one hundred and fifty and not exceeding two hundred threads to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, two cents per square yard; if bleached, two and three-quarter cents per square yard; if dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, four and one-fourth cents per square yard': Provided, That on all cotton cloth exceeding one hundred and fifty and not exceeding two hun- dred threads to the square inch, count- ing the warp and filling, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, valued at over eight cents per square yard, thirty per centum ad va- lorem; bleached, valued at over ten cents per square yard, thirtj^-five per centum ad valorem;- dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, valued at over twelve cents per square j^ard,. there shall be levied, collected, and 15 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. paid a diity of forty per centum ad valorem. • 254. Cotton cloth, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, exceeding two hundred threads to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, three cents per square yard ; if bleached, four cents per square yard ; if dyed, colored, Stained, painted, or printed, five and three-fourths cents per square yard : Provided, That on all such cotton cloths not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, valued at over ten cents per square yard, thirty per centum ad valorem ; bleached, valued at over twelve cents per square yard, thirty-five per centum ad valorem ; and dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, valued at over fifteen cents per square yard, there shall be levied, collected, and paid a duty of forty per centum ad valorem. 255. The term cotton cloth, or cloth, wherever used in the foregoing paragraphs of this schedule, shall be held to include all woven fabrics of cotton in the piece, whether figured, fancy, or plain, rot specially provided for in this act, the warp and filling threads of which can be counted by unraveling or other practicable means. 256. Clothing ready made, and ar- ticles of wearing apparel of every de- scription, handkerchiefs, and neckties or neckwear, composed of cotton or other vegetable fibre, or of which cot- ton or other vegetable fibre is the component material of chief value, made up or manufactured wholly or in part by the tailor, seamstress, or manu- facturer, all of the foregoing not spe- cially provided for in this act, forty per centum ad valorem. 257. Plushes, velvets, velveteens, corduroys, and all pile fabrics com- posed of cotton or other vegetable fiber, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, thirty-five per centum ad valorem ; on all such goods if bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, forty per centum ad valorem. 258. Chenille curtains, table cov- ers, and all goods manufactured of cotton chenille, or of which cotton chenille forms the component material of chief value, forty per centum ad valorem . 259. Stockings, hose and half-hose, made on knitting machines or frames, composed of cotton or other vegetable fiber and not otherwise specially pro- vided for in this act, and shirts and drawers composed of cotton, valued at not more than one dollar and fifty cents per dozen , thirty per centum ad valorem . 260 Stockings, hose and half-hose, selvedged, fashioned, narrowed, or shaped wholly or in part by knit- ting machines or frames, or knit by hand, including such as are commer- cially known as seamless or clocked stockings, hose or half-hose, all of the above composed of cotton or other vegetable fiber, finished or unfinished,, forty per centum ad valorem. 261. Cords, braids, boot, shoe, and corset lacings, tape, gimps, galloons, webbing, goring, suspenders, and braces, made of cotton or other vege- table fiber, and whether composed in part of India rubber or otherwise, and cotton damask, in the piece or other- wise, thirty-five per centum ad valo- rem. 262. All manufactures of cotton not specially provided for in this act, including cloth having India rubber as a component material, thirty-five per centum ad valorem. Schedule J.— Flax, Hemp, and- Jdte, and Manufactures of. 263. Flax, hackled, known as " dressed line," one and one-half cents per pound. 264. Hemp, hackled, known as " dressed line," one cent per pound. 265. Yarn, made of jute, twenty per centum ad valorem. 266. Cables, cordage, and twine (except binding twinej, composed in whole or in part of istle or Tampico fiber, manila, sisal grass, or sunn, and cables and cordage made of hemp, ten per centum ad valorem. 267. Hemp and jute carptts and carpetings, twenty per centum ad va- lorem . 268. Burlaps, not exceeding sixty mches in width, containing not over forty threads to the square inch count- ing warp and filling, fifteen per centum ad valorem'; bags for grain made of such burlaps, twenty per centum ad valorem. 16 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. 269. Bagging for cotton, gunny- cloth, and all similar material suitable fot covering cotton, composed in whole or in part of hemp, flax, jute, or jute butts, fifteen per centum ad valorem. 270. Flax gill netting, nets, webs, and seines, thirty per centum ad va- lorem . 271. Oilcloth for floors, stamped, painted, or printed, including linoleum, corticene, cork carpets, figured or plain, and all other oilcloth (except silk oilcloth), and waterproof cloth, not specially provided for in this act, thirty per centum ad valorem. 272. Yams or threads composed of flax or hemp, or of a mixture of either of these substances, valued at thirteen cents or less per pound, twenty- five per centum ad valorem ; valued at more thati thirteen cents per pound, thirty per centum ad valorem. 273. Collars and cuffs, and shirts, and all articles of wearing apparel of every description, not specially pro- vided for in tbis act, composed wholly or in part oi linen, and linen hydraulic hose, thirty -five per centum ad valorem. 274. Laces, edgings, embroideries, insertings, neck rufflings, ruchings, trimmings, tuckings, lace window cur- tains, and other similar tamboured ar- ticles, and articles embroidered by hand or machinery, embroidered or hem- stitched handkerchiefs, and articles made wholly or in part of lace, ruf- flings, tuckings, or ruchings, all of the above named articles, composed of flax, jute, cotton, or other vegetable fiber, or of which these substances or either of thirm, or a mixture of any of them is the component material of chief value, not specially provided for in this act, forty per centum ad valorem. 275. All manufactures of flax, hemp, jute, or other vegetable fiber, except cotton, or of which flax, hemp, jute, or other vegetable fiber, except cotton, is the component material of chief value, not specially provided for in this act, thirty per centum ad va- lorem. Schedule K. — Wool and Manu- factures OF Wool. 276. Wool of the sheep, hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, and other like animals in the form of slubbing waste, roving waste, ring waste, mungo, shod- dies, gametted orcarded waste, carbon- ized noils or other waste product, any of which is composed wholly or in part of wool, the hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, and other like animals, which has been improved or advanced beyond its original condition as waste by the use of machinery or the application of labor, or both, and carbonized wool, shall be subject to a duty of fifteen per centum ad valorem. 277. On wool of the sheep, hair of the camel, goat, alpaca or other like animals, in the form of roving, roping, or tops, valued at not more than thirty- five cents per pound, the duty shall be twenty-five per centum ad valorem ; valued at over thirty-five cents per pound, the duty shall be thirty per centum ad valorem. 278. On woolen and worsted yarns made wholly or in part of wool, worsted, the hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, or other animals, valued at not more than forty cents perpound, thirty per centum ad valorem ; valued at more than fortycents per pound, thirty- five per centum ad valorem. 279. On woolen or worsted cloths, shawls, knit fabrics, and all fabrics made on knitting machines or frames, and all manufactures of every descrip- tion made wholly or in part of wool, worsted, the hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, or other animals, and any of the above having India rubber as a component material, not specially pro- vided for in this act, forty per centum ad valorem. 280. On blankets, hats of wool, and flannels for underwear and felts for paper-maker's use and printing ma- chines, composed wholly or in part of wool, the hair of the camel, goat, al- paca, or other animals, valued at not more .than thirty cents per pound, twenty-five per centum ad valorem ; valued at more than thirty and not more than forty cents per pound, thirty per centum ad valorem ; valued at more than fortycents per pound, thirty- five per centum ad valorem : Provided, That on blankets over three yards in length the same duties shall be paid as on woolen and worsted cloths, and on flannels weighing over four ounces per square yard, the same duties as on dress goods. 281. On women's and children's 17 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. dress goods, coat linings, Italian cloth, bunting, and goods of similar descrip- tion or character, composed wholly or in part of wool, worsted, the hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, or other ani- mals, and not specially provided for in this act, forty per centum ad valorem. 282. On clothing, ready made, and articles of wearing apparel of every description, made up or manufactured wholly or in part, not specially provided for in this act, felts not woven, and not specially provided for in this act, and plushes and other pile fabrics, all the foregoing, composed wholly or in part of wool, worsted, the hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, or other animals, includ- ing those having india rubber as a component material, forty-five per centum ad valorem. 283. On cloaks, dolmans, jackets, talmas, ulsters, or other outside gar- ments for ladies' and children's ap- parel, and goods of similar description or used for like purposes, composed wholly or in part of wool, worsted, the hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, or other animals, made up or manufac- tured wholly or in part, forty-five per centum ad valorem. 284. On webbings, gorings, sus- penders, braces, beltings, bindings, braids, galloons, fringes, gimps, cords, cords and tassels, dress trimmings, laces and embroideries, head nets, buttons, or barrel buttons, or buttons of other forms, for tassels or orna- ments, an5' of the foregoing which are elastic or non-elastic, made of wool, worsted, the hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, or other animals, or of which wool, worsted, the hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, or other animals is a component material, forty per centum ad valorem. 285. Aubusson, Axminster, Mo- quette, and Chenille carpets, figured or plain, carpets wove a whole for rooms, and all carpets or carpeting of like character or "description, and oriental, Berlin and other similar rugs, thirty -five per centum ad valorem. 286. Saxony, Wilton, and Tournay velvet carpets, figured or plain, and all carpets or carpeting of like character or description, thirty -five per centum ad valorem . 287. Brussels carpets, figured or plain, and all carpets or carpeting of like character or description, thirty per centum ad valorem. 288. Velvet and tapestry velvet carpets, figured or plain, printed on the warp or otherwise, and all carpets or carpeting of like character, or description, thirty per centum ad va- lorem 289. Tapestry Brussels carpets, figured or plain, and all carpets or carpeting of like character or descrip- tion, printed on the warp or otherwise, thirty per centum ad valorem. 290. Treble ingrain, three-ply, and all chain Venetian carpets, thirty per centum ad valorem. 291. Wool Dutch and two-ply in- grain carpets, twenty -five per centum ad valorem. 292. Druggets and bockings, prin- ted, colored, or otherwise, felt carpet- ing, figured or plain, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 293 . Carpets and carpeting of wool, flax, or cotton, or composed in part of either, not specially provided for in this act, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 294. Mats, rugs, screens, covers, hassocks, bed sides, art squares, and other portions of carpets or carpeting made wholly or in part of wool, and not specially provided for in this act, shall be subjected to the rate of duty herein imposed on carpets or carpet- ings of like character or description. 295. The reduction of the rates of duty herein provided for manufactures of wool shall take effect July first, eighteen hundred and ninety-four, and on all rates of duty in the woolen schedule, except on carpets, there shall be a reduction of one per centum ad valorem to take effect on the first day of July, eighteen hundred and ninety-six, and thereafter of a like amount on the first day of July, eigh- teen hundred and ninety -seven, eigh- teen hundred and ninety -eight, eigh- teen hundred and ninety-nine, and nineteen hundred, respectively. Schedule L.— Silks and Silk Goods. 296. Silk partially manufactured from cocoons or from waste silk, and not further advanced or manufactured than carded or combed silk, twenty- F. B. Vandegrift & Co. five cents per pound. Thrown silk, not more advanced than singles, tram, organzine, sewing silk, twist, floss, and silk threads or yams of every de- scription, except spun silk, twenty per centum ad valorem ; spun silk in skeins, cops, warps, or on beams, twenty per centum ad valorem. 297. Velvets, plushes, chenilles, or other pile fabrics, forty-five per centum ad valorem. 298. Webbings, gorings, suspend- ers, braces, beltings, bindings, braids, galloons, tringes, cords, and tassels, any of the foregoing which are elastic, or non elastic, buttons, and ornaments, made of silk, or of which silk is the component material of chief value, forty per centum ad valorem. 299 . lyaces and articles made wholly or in part of lace, and embroideries, in- eluding articles or fabrics embroidered by hand or machinery, handkerchiefs, neck rufilings and ruchings, clothing ready made, and articles of wearing apparel of every description, including knit goods made up or manufactured wholly or in part by the tailor, seam- streiss, or manufacturer, composed of silk, or of which silk is the component material of chief value, and beaded silk goods, not specially provided for in this act, fifty per centum ad valo- rem. 300. All manufactures of silk, or of which silk is the component mate- rial of chief value, including those having India rubber as a component material, not specially provided for in this act, forty- five per centum ad valo- rem. ScHEDUivK M. — Pui,p, Papers, and Books. Pui^p AND Paper : 301. Mechanically-ground wood pulp and chemical wood pulp un- bleached or bleached, ten per centum ad valorem. 302. Sheathing paper and roofing- telt, ten per centum ad valorem. 303. Printing paper unsized, suita- ble only for books and newspapers, twelve per centum ad valorem. 304. Printing paper, sized or glued, suitable only for books and newspapers, fifteen per centum ad valorem. 305. Papers known commercially as copying paper, filtering paper, silver paper, and all tissue paper, white, printed, or colored, made up in copying books, reams, or in any other form, and albumenized or sensitized paper, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 306. Parchment papers, surface- coated papers, and manufactures thereof, cardboards, lithographic prints from either stone or zinc, bound or unbound (except illustra- tions when forming a part of a periodi- cal, newspaper, or in printed books accompanying the same), and all articles produced either in whole or in part by lithographic process, and photograph, autograph, and scrap albums, wholly or partially manu- factured, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. Manufactures of Paper : 307. Paper envelopes, twenty per centum ad valorem. 308. Paper hangings and paper for screens or fireboards, writing paper, drawing paper, and all other paper not specially provided for in this act, twenty per centum ad valorem. 309. Blank books of all kinds, twenty per centum ad valorem; books, including pamphlets and engravings, bound or unbound, photographs, etchings, maps, charts, and all printed matter not specially provided for in this act, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 310. Playing cards, in packs not exceeding fifty-four cards and at a like rate for any number in excess, ten cents per pack and fifty per centum ad valorem. 311. Manufactures of paper, or of which paper is the component material of chief value, not specially provided for in this act, twenty per centum ad valorem. Schedule N. — Sundries. 312. Hair pencils, brushes and feather dusters, thirty per centum ad valorem; brooms, twenty per centum ad valorem. Buttons and Button Forms : 313. Button forms : I,astings, mohair, cloth, silk, or other manu- factures of cloth, woven or made in patterns of such size, shape, or form, or cut in such manner as to be fit for buttons exclusively, ten per centum 19 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. ad valorem. 314. Buttons commercially known as agate buttons, twenty -five per centum ad valorem ; pearl and shell buttons, wholly or partially manu- factured, one cent per line and fifteen per centum ad valorem. 315. Ivory, vegetable ivory, glass, bone or horn buttons, wholly or par- tially manufactured, twenty -five per centum ad valorem. 316. Shoe buttons, made of paper, board, papier mache, pulp, or other similar material not specially provided for in this act, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 317. Manufactured corks, twenty per centum ad valorem. 318. Dice, draughts, chess-men, chess-balls, and billiard, pool and bag- atelle balls, of ivory, bone, or other materials, fifty per centum ad valorem. 319. Dolls, doll heads, toy marbles of whatever material composed, and all other toys not composed of rubber, china, porcelain, parian, bisque, earth- en or stone ware, and not specially provided for in this act, twenty -five per centum ad valorem. 320. Emery grains, and emery manufactured, ground, pulverized, or refined, one cent per pound. Explosive Substances : 321. Fire-crackers of all kinds, eight cents per pound, but no allow- ance shall be made for tare or damage thereon. 322. Fulminates, fulminating pow- ders, and like articles, not specially provided for in this act, thirty per centum ad valorem. 323. Gunpowder, and all explosive substances used for mining, blasting, artillery, or sporting purposes, when valued at twenty cents or less per pound, five cents per pound ; valued above twenty cents per pound, eight cents per pound. 324. Matches, friction or lucifer, of all descriptions, twenty per centum ad valorem . 325. Percussion caps, thirty per centum ad valorem ; blasting caps, thirty -five per centum ad valorem . 326. Feathers and downs of all kinds, when dressed, colored, or man- ufactured, including quilts of down and other manufactures of down, and also including dressed and finished birds suitable for millinery ornaments, and artificial and ornamental feathers, fruits, grains, leaves, flowers, and stems, or parts thereof, of whatever material composed, suitable for milli- nery use, not specially provided for in this act, thirty-five per centum ad va- lorem. 327. Furs, dressed on the skin but not made up into articles, and furs not on the skin, prepared for hatters' use, twenty per centum ad valorem. 328. Fans of all kinds, except common palm-leaf fans, forty per centum ad valorem. 329. Gun wads of all descriptions, twenty -five per centum ad valorem. 330. Hair, human, if clean or drawn but not manufactured, twenty per centum ad valorem. 331. Haircloth known as "crino- line cloth," thirty per centum ad valorem. 332. Haircloth known as "hair seating," twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 333. Hats for men's, women's, and children's wear, composed of the fur of the rabbit, beaver, or other animals, or of which such fur is the component material of chief value, wholly or partially manufactured, including fur hat bodies, thirty per centum ad va- lorem. Jewelry and precious stones: 334. Jewelry: All articles, not specially provided for in this act, and commercially known as "jewelry," and cameos in frames, thirty -five per centum ad valorem. 335. Pearls, fifteen per centum ad valorem. 336. Precious stones of all kinds, cut but not set, fifteen per centum ad valorem; if set, and not specially pro- vided for in this act, including pearls set or strung, twenty -five per centum ad valorem. Imitations of precious stones composed of paste or glass not exceeding one inch in dimensions, not set, ten per centum ad valorem. Leather and manufactures of: 337. Sole leather, five per centum ad valorem . 338 Bend or belting leather, and leather not specially provided for in 20 F. B. Vandsgrift & Co. this act, ten per centum ad valorem. 339. Calfskins, tanned, or tanned and dressed, dressed upper leather, in- cluding patent, enameled, and jap- anned leather, dressed or undressed, and finished; chamois or other skins not specially enumerated or provided for in this act, twenty per centum ad valorem; bookbinders' calfskins, kan- garoo, sheep and goat skins, including lamb and kid skins, dressed and fin- ished, twenty per centum ad valorem; skins for morocco, tanned but unfin- ished, ten per centum ad valorem; pianoforte leather and pianoforte ac- tion leather, boots and shoes, made of leather, twenty per centum ad va- lorem. 340. lycather cut into shoe uppers or vamps, or other forms, suitable for conversion into manufactured articles, twenty per centum ad valorem. 341. Gloves made wholly or in part of leather, whether wholly or partly manufactured, shall pay duty at the following rates the lengths stated in each case being the extreme length when stretched to their full extent, namely: 342. Ladies' or children's "glace" finish, Schmaschen (of sheep origin), not over fourteen inches in length, one dollar per dozen pairs ; over fourteen inches and not over seventeen inches in length, one dollar and fifty cents per dozen pairs ; over seventeen inches in length, two dollars per dozen pairs; men's "glace" finished, Schmaschen (sheep), two dollars per dozen pairs. 343. Ladies' or children's "glace" finish, lamb or sheep, not over fourteen inches in length, one dollar and seven- ty-five cents per dozen pairs ; over fourteen and not over seventeen inches in length, two dollars and seventy -five cents per dozen pairs ; over seventeen inches in length, three dollars and seventy-five cents per dozen pairs. Men's "glace" finish, lamb or sheep, three dollars per dozen pairs. 344. Ladies' or children's "glace" finish, goat, kid, or other leather than of sheep origin, not over fourteen inches in length, two dollars and twen- ty-five cents per dozen pairs; over fourteen and not over seventeen inches in length, three dollars per dozen pairs; over seventeen inches in length, four dollars per dozen pairs; men's "glace" finish, kid, goat, or other leather than of sheep origin, three dollars per dozen pairs. 345. Ladies' or children's, of sheep origin, with exterior grain surface re- moved, by whatever name'known, not over fourteen inches in length ,onedollar and seventy-five cents per dozen pairs; over fourteen and not over seventeen inches in length, two dollars and sev- enty-five cents per dozen pairs; over seventeen inches in length, three dollars and seventy-five cents per dozen pairs; men's, of sheep origin, with exterior surface removed, by whatever name known, three dollars per dozen pairs. 346. Ladies or children's kid, goat, or other leather than of sheep origin, with exterior grain surface removed, by whatever name known, not over fourteen inches in length, two dollars and twenty-five cents per dozen pairs ; over fourteen inches and not over seventeen inches in length, three dollars per dozen pairs; over seven- teen inches in length, four dollars per dozen pairs; men's goat, kid, or other leather than of sheep or- igin, with exterior grain surface re- moved, by whatever name known, three dollars per dozen pairs. 347. In addition to the foregoing ratts, there shall be paid on all leather gloves, when lined, sixty cents per dozen pairs. 348. Glove trank*, with or without the usual accompanying pieces, shall pay seventy-five per centum of the duty provided for the gloves in the fabrication of which they are suitable. Miscellaneous manufactures : 349. Manufactures of amber, as- bestus, bladders, coral, catgut or whipgut or wormgut, jet, paste, spar, wax, or of which these substances or either of them is the component material of chief value, not specially provided for in this act, twenty -five per centum ad valorem. 350. Manufactures of bone, chip, grass, horn, India rubber, palm leaf, straw, weeds, or whalebone, or of which these substances or either of them is the component material of chief value, not specially provided for in this act, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. But the term grass and straw shall be understood to mean F. B. Vandegrift & Co. these substances in their natural form and structure and not the separated fiber thereof. 351. Manufactures of leather, fur, gutta-perch, vulcanized India rubber, known as hard rubber, human hair, papier-mache, plaster of Paris, in- durated fiber wares, and other manu- factures composed of wood or other pulp, or of which these substances or either of them is the component material of chief value, all of the above not specially provided for in this act, thirty per centum ad valorem. 352. Manufactures of ivory, veg- etable ivory, mother-of-pearl, gelatine, and shell, or of which these sub- stances or either of them is the com- ponent material of chief value, not specially provided for in this act, and manufactures known commercially as bead or beaded trimmings or orna- ments, thirty -five per centum ad valorem . 353. Masks, composed of paper or pulp, twenty -five per centum ad valorem. 354. Matting and mats made of cocoa fiber or rattan, twenty per centum ad valorem. 355. Pencils of wood filled with lead or other material, thirty -five per centum ad valorem; slate pencils, twenty -five per centum ad valorem. 356. Pencil leads not in wood, ten per centum ad valorem. 357. Pipes, pipe bowls, of all materials, and all smokers' articles whatsoever, not specially provided for in this act, including cigarette books, cigarette-book covers, pouches for smoking or chewing tobacco, and cigarette paper in all forms, fifty per centum ad valorem ; all common tobacco pipes of clay, valued at not more than fifty cents per gross, ten cents per gross. 358. Umbrellas, parasols, and sun- shades, covered with material com- posed wholly or in part of silk, wool or goat hair, forty-five per centum ad valorem; if covered with paper or other material, thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 359. Umbrellas, parasols, and sun- shades, sticks for, if plain or carved, finished or unfinished, thirty per cen- tum ad valorum. 360. "Waste, not specially provided for in this act, ten per centum ad valorem. FREE LIST. Sec. 2. On and after the first day of June, eighteen hundred and ninety- four, unless otherwise provided for in this act, the following articles, when imported, shall be exempt from duty: 361. Acids used for medicinal,- chemical, or manufacturing purposes, not especially provided for in this act. 362. Aconite. 363. Acorns, raw, dried or undried, but unground. 364. Agates, unmanufactured. 365. Albumen. 366. Alizarin, natural or artificial, and all colors or dyes commercially known as alizarin colors or dyes. 367. Amber, unmanufactured, or crude gum. 368. Ambergris. 369. Ammonia, carbonate of, mu- riate of, or sal-ammoniac and sulphate of. 370. Aniline salts. 371. Any animal imported specially for breeding purposes shall be admitted free: Provided, That no such animal shall be admitted free unless pure bred of a recognized breed, and duly regis- tered in the book of record established for that breed, and- the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe such addi- tional regulations as may be required for the strict enforcement of this pro- vision. 372. Animals brought into the United States temporarily for a period not exceeding six months, for the pur- pose of exhibition or competition for prizes offered by any agricultural or racing associatioli; but a bond shall be given in accordance with regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury; also, teams of animals, in- cluding their harness and tackle and the wagons or other vehicles actually owned by persons emigrating from for- eign countries to the United States with their families, and in actual use for the purpose of such emigration under such regulations as the Secre- tary of the Treasury may prescribe; and wild animals intended for exhibi- tion in zoological collections for scien- tific and educational purposes, and not for sale or profit. 22 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. 373. Annatto, roucou, rocoa, or Orleans, and all extract of. 374. Antimony ore, crude sulphite of, and antimony, as regulus or metal. 375. Apatite. 376. Apples, green or ripe. 377. Apples, dried, dessicated, evaporated, or prepared in any man- ner, and not otherwise provided for in this act. 378. Argal, or argol, or crude tar- tar. 379. Arrow root, raw or unmanu- factured: 380. Arsenic and sulphide of, or orpiment. 381. Arseniate of aniline. 382. Art educational stops, com- posed of glass and metal, and valued at not more than six cents per gross. 383. Articles imported by the United States. 384. Articles in a crude state used in dyeing or tanning not specially provided for in this act. 385. Articles the growth, produce, and manufacture of the tJnited States, when returned after having been ex- ported, without having been advanced in value or improved in condition by any process of manufacture or other means; casks, barrels, carboys, bags, and other vessels of American manu- facture exported filled with American products, or exported empty and re- turned filled with foreign products, in- cluding shooks when returned as bar- rels or boxes: also quicksilver flasks or bottles, of either domestic or for- eign manufacture, which shall have been actually exported from the United States; but proof of the identity of such articles shall be made, under general regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury, but the exemption of bags from duty shall apply only to such domestic bags as may be imported by the exporter there- of, and if any such articles are subject to internal tax at the time of exporta- tion such tax shall be pro\'ed to have been paid before exportation and not refunded: Provided, That this paragraph shall not apply to any article to which an allowance of draw- back has been made, the reimportation of which is hereby prohibited except upon payment of duties equal to the drawbacks allowed; or to any article manufactured in bonded warehouse and exported under any provision of law: And provided further , That when man- ufactured tobacco which has been ex- ported without payment of internal- revenue tax shall be reimported it shall be retained in the custody of the collector of customs until internal- revenue stamps in payment of the legal duties shall be placed thereon. 386. Abestos, manufactured. 387. Ashes, wood and lye of, and beet- root ashes. 388. Asphaltum and bitumen , crude or dried, but not otherwise manipu- lated, or treated. 389. Asafetida. 390. Bacon aud hams, beef, mut- ton, and pork, and meats of all kinds, prepared or preserved, not specially provided for in this Act. 391. Balm of Gilead. 392. Barks, cinchona or other, from which quinine may be extracted. 393. Baryta carbonate of, or with- erite, and baryta, sulphate of, or bary- tes, unmanufactured, including barytes earth. 394. Bauxite, or beauxite. 395. Beeswax. 396. Bells, broken, and bell metal broken and fit only to be remanufac- tured. 397. All binding twine manufac- tured in whole or in part from istle or Tampico fiber, manilla, sisal grass, or sunn, of single ply and measuring not exceeding six hundred feet to the pound. 398. Birds, stuffed, not suitable for millinery ornaments, and bird skins, prepared for preservation, but not further advanced in manufacture. 399. Birds and land and water fowls. 400. Bismuth. 401. Bladders, and all integuments of animals, crude, salted for preserva- tion, and unmanufactured, not specially provided for in this act. 402. Blood dried. 403. Blue vitroil, or sulphate of copper. 404 . Bologno sausages. 405. Bolting cloths, especially for milling purposes, but not suitable for the manufacture of wearing apparel. 406. Bones, crude or not burned, calcined, ground, steamed, or otherwise F. B. VANDE GRIFT & Co. manufactured, and bone dust or animal carbon, and bone ash, fit only for fer- tilizing purposes. 407. Bone char, suitable for use in decolorizing sugars. 408. Books, engravings, photographs, bound, or unbound, etchings, maps, and charts, which shall have been printed more than twenty years at the date of importation, and not rebound within twenty years from said date, and books and periodicals devoted exclus- sively to original scientific research, and publications issued for their sub- scribers, by scientific and literary asso- ciations or acadamies, or publications of individuals for private circulation. 409. Books and pamphlets printed exclusively in languages other than Bnglish ; also books and music, in raised print, used exclusively by the blind. 410. Books, engravings, photo- graphs, etchings, bound or unbound, maps and charts imported by authority or for the use of the United States or for the use of the Library of Congress. '^ 411. Books, maps, lithographic prints, and charts, specially imported, not more than two copies in any one invoice, in good faith, for the use of any society incorporated or established for educational, philosophical, literary, or religious purposes, or for the en- couragement of the fine arts, or for the use or by order of any college, academy, school, or seminary of learn- ing in the United States, subject to such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury shall prescribe. 412. Books, libraries, usual furni- ture, and similar household effects of persons or families from foreign countries, if actually used abroad by them not less than one year, and not intended for any other person or persons, nor for sale. 413. Borax, crude, or borate of soda, or borate of lime. 414. Brazil paste. 415. Braids, plaits, laces, and similar manufactures composed of straw, chip, grass, palm leaf, willow, osier, or rattan, suitable for making or ornamenting hats, bonnets, and hoods. 416. Brazilian pebble, un wrought or unmanufactured. 417. Breccia, in block or slabs. 418. Bristles. 419. Bromine. 420. Broom com. 421. Bullion, gold or silver. 422. Burgundy pitch. 423. Cabbages. 424. Old coins and medals, and other antiquities, but the term "an- tiquities" as used in this act shall include only such articles as are suit- able for souvenirs or cabinet collec- tions, and which shall have been produced at any period prior to the year seventeen hundred. 425. Cadmium. 426. Calamine. 427. Camphor. 428. Castor or castoreum. 429. Catgut, whipgut, or wormgut, unmanufactured, or not further manu- factured than in strings or cords. 430. Cerium. 431. Chalk, unmanufactured. 432. Charcoal. 433. Chicory root, raw, dried, or undried, but unground. 434. Cider. 435. Civet, crude. 436. Chromate of iron or chromic ore. 437. Clay — Common blue clay in casks suitable for the manufacture of crucibles. 438. Clays or earths, un wrought or unmanufactured, not specially pro- vided for in this act. 439. Coal, anthracite, bituminous, and shale, and coal slack or culm. 440. Coke. 441. Coal tar, crude, and all pre- parations and products of coal tar, not colors or dyes, not specially provided for in this act. 442. Cobalt and cobalt ore, and oxide of cobalt. 443. Cocculus indicus. 444. Cochineal. 445. Cocoa, or cacao, crude, and fiber, leaves, and shells of. 446. Coiiee. 447. Coins, gold, silver, and cop- per. 448. Coir,, and coir yarn. 449. Copper imported in the form of ores. 450. Old copper, fit only for manu- facture, clipping from new copper, and all composition metal of which copper is a component material of chief value not specially provided for in this act. 24 F. B. Vandbgrift & Co. 45 1 . Copper, regulus of, and black or coarse copper, and copper cement. 452. Copper in plates, bars, ingots, or pigs, and other forms, not manufac- tured, not specially provided for in this act. 453. Copperas, or sulphate of iron. 454. Coral, marine, uncut, aiid unmanufactured . 455. Cork wood or cork bark, un- manufactured, or cut into squares or cubes. 456. Cotton, and cotton waste or flocks. 457. Cotton ties of iron or steel cut to lengths, punched or not punched, with or without buckles, for baling cotton. 458. Cryolite, or kryolith. 459. Cudbear. 460. Curling stones, or quoits, and curling-stone handles. 461. Curry and curry powder. 462. Cutch. 463. Cuttlefish bone. 464. Dandelionroots, raw, dried, or undried, but unground. 465. Diamonds and other precious stones, rough or uncut, including glaziers' and engravers' diamonds not set, and diamond dust or bort, and jewels to be used in the manufacture of watches or clocks. 466. Divi-divi. 467. D ragon ' s blood . 468. Drugs, such as barks, beans, berries, balsams, buds, bulbs, bulbous roots, excrescences, fruits, flowers, dried fibers, dried insects, grains, gums and gum resin, herbs, leaves, lichens, mosses, nuts, roots and stems, spices, vegetables, seeds aromatic, seeds of morbid growth, weeds, and woods used expressly for dyeing; any of the foregoing which are not edible, whether crude or advanced in value or condition by refining or grinding, or by other process of manufacture, and not speci- ally provided for in this act. 469. Eggs and yolks of, and eggs of birds, fish, and insects. 470. Emery ore. 471. Ergot. 472. Common palm leaf fans, and palm leaf unmanufactured. 473. Farina. 474. Fashion plates, engraved on steel or copper or on wood, colored or plain. 475. Feathers and downs for beds, and feathers and downs of all kinds, crude or not dressed, colored, or manu- factured, not specially provided for in this act. 476. Feldspar. 477. Felt, adhesive, for sheathing vessels. 478. Fibrin, in all forms. 479. Fish, fresh. 480. Fish for bait. 481. Fish skins. 482. Flint, flints, and ground flint stones . 483. Floor matting manufactured from round or split straw, including what is commonly known as Chinese matting. 484. Fossils. 485. Fruit plants, tropical and semitropical, for the purpose of pro- pagation or cultivation. Fruits and Nuts : 486. Currants, Zante or other. 487. Dates. 488. Fruits, green, ripe, or dried not specially provided for in this act. 489. Tamarinds. 490. Cocanuts, Brazil nuts, cream nuts, palm nuts, and palm -nut kernels, 491. Furs, undressed. 492. Fur skins of all kinds not dressed in any manner. 493. Gambler. 494. Glass, broken, and old glass, which cannot be cut for use, and fit only to be remanufactured. 495. Glass plates or disks, rough- cut or un wrought, for use in the manu- facture of optical instruments, specta- cles, and eyeglasses, and suitable only for such use : Provided, however, That such disks exceeding eight inches in diameter may be polished sufficiently to enable the character of the glass to be determined. Grasses and Fibers : 496. Istle or Tampico fiber, jute, jute butts, manila, sisal grass, sunn, flax straw, flax, not hackled, tow of flax or hemp, hemp not hackled, hemp, flax, jute, and tow wastes, and all other textile grasses or fibrous vegetable substances, manufactured or undressed, not specially provided for in this act. 497. Gold-beaters' molds and gold- beaters' skins. 25 F. B.Vandegrift & Co. 498. Grease and oils, such as are commonly used in soap-making or in wire-drawing, or for stuffing or dress- ing leather, and which are fit only for such uses, not specially provided for in this act. 499. Guano, manures, and all sub- stances expressly used for manure. 500. Gunny bags and gunny cloths, old or refuse, fit only for remanufac- ture. 501. Guts, salted. 502. Gutta-percha, crude. 503. Hair of horse, cattle, and other animals, cleaned or uncleaned, drawn or undrawn, and curled hair suitable for beds or mattresses, not specially provided for in this act; and human hair, raw, uncleaned, and not drawn . 504. Hides and skins,- raw or un- cured, whether dry, salted, orpickled. 505. Hide cuttings, raw, with or without hair, and all other glue stock. 506. Hide rope. 507. Hones and whetstones. 508. Hoofs, unmanufactured. 509. Hop roots for cultivation. 510. Horns, and parts of, unmanu- factured, including horn strips and tips. 511. Ice. 512. India rubber, crude, and milk of, and old scrap or refuse India rub- ber, which has been worn out by use and is fit only for remanufacture. 513. Indigo, and extracts or pastes of, and carmines. 514. Iodine , crude , and resublimed . 515. Ipecac. 516. Iridium. 517. Iron ore, including manganif- erous iron ore, also the dross or residu- um from burnt pjj-rites, and sulphur ore, as pyrites or sulphuret of iron in its natural state. 518. Ivory, sawed or cut into logs, but not otherwise manufactured, and vegetable ivory. 519. Jalap. 520. Jet, unmanufactured. 521. Joss stick, or Joss light. 522. Junk, old. 523. Kelp. 524. Kieserite. 525. Kyanite , or cyanite , or kainite . 526. lyac-dye, crude, seed, button, stick, and shell. 527. L,ac spirits. 528. lyactarine. 529. I^ard. 530. Lava, unmanufactured. 531. Leeches. 532. Lemon juice, lime juice, and sour-orange juice. 533. Licorice root, unground. 534. Lifeboats and life-saving ap- paratus specially imported by societies incorporated or established to encour- age the saving of human life. 535. Lime, citrate of. 536. Lime, chloride of, or bleach- ing powder. 537. Lithographic stones not en- graved. 538. Litmus, prepared or not pre- pared. 539. Loadstones. 540. Madder and munjeet, or Indian madder, ground or prepared, and all extracts of. 541. Magnesia, sulphate of, or Epsom salts. 542. Magnesite, or native mineral carbonate of magnesia. 543. Magnesium. 544. Magnets. 545. Manganese, oxide and ore of.. 546. Manna. 547. Manuscripts. 548.. Marrow, crude. 549. Marshmallows. 550. Medals of gold, ^ilver, or copper, such as trophies or prizes. 551. Mica, and metallic mineral substances in a crude state and metals unwrought, not specially provided for in this act. 552. Meerschaum, crude or un- manufactured. 553. Milk, fresh. 554. Mineral waters, all not arti- ficial, and mineral salts of the same, obtained by evaporation, when accom- panied by duly authenticated certifi- cate, showing that they are in no way artificially prepared, and are the pro- duet of a designated mineral spring ; lemonade, soda- waiter, and all similar waters. 555. Minerals, crude, or not advanced in value or condition by refining or grinding, or by other process of manufacture, not specially provided for in this act. 556. Models of inventions and of other improvements in the arts, including patterns for machinery, but no article shall be deemed a model or 26 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. pattern which can be fitted for use otherwise. 557. Moss, seaweeds, and veg- etable substances, crude or unmanu- factured, not otherwise specially provided for in this act. 558. Musk, crude, in natural pods, 559. Myrobolan. 560. Needles, hand-sewing and darning. 561. Newspapers and periodicals; but the term "periodicals" as herein used shall be understood to embrace only unbound or paper-covered publi- cations, containing current literature of the day and issued regularly at stated periods, as weekly, monthly, or quarterly. 562. Nickel, nickel oxide, alloy of any kind in which nickel is the com- ponent material of chief value. 563. Nux vomica. 564. Oakum. 565. Ocher and ochery earths, sienna and sienna earths, umber and umber earths, not specially provided for in this act, dry. 566. Oil cake. 567. Oils : Almond, amber, crude and rectified ambergris, anise or anise seed, aniline, aspic or spike lavender, bergamot, cajeput, caraway, cassia, cinnamon, cedrat, chamomile, citron- ella or lemon grass, civet, cotton seed, croton, fennel. Jasmine or Jasimine, Juglandium, Juniper, leavender, lemon, limes, mace, neroli or orange flower, nut oil or oil of nuts not otherwise specially provided for in this act, orange oil, olive oil for manufacturing or mechanical purposes unfit for eating and not otherwise provided for in this act, ottar of roses, palm and cocoanut, rosemary or anthoss, sesame or sesa- mumseedpr bean, thyme, origanum red or white, valerian ; and also sper- maceti, whale, and other fish oils of American fisheries, and all other arti- cles the produce of such fisheries ; pe- troleum, crude or refined : Provided, That if any petroleum is imported, the product of any country which imposes a duty on petroleum exported from the United States, then there shall be levied, collected and paid upon such imported petroleum the rates of duty existing prior to the passage of this act. 568. Olives, green or prepared. 569. Opium, crude or unmanufac- tiired, and not adulterated, containing nine per centum and over of morphia. 570. Orange and lemon peel, not preserved, candied, or otherwise pre- pared. 571. Orchil, or orchil liquid. 572. Orchids, lily of the valley, azaleas, palms, and other plants used for forcing under glass for cut flowers or decorative purposes. 573- Ores, of gold, silver, and nickel, and nickel matte. 574. Osmium. 575. Paintings, in oil or water col- ors, original drawings and sketches, and artists' proofs of etchings and en- gravings, and statuary, not otherwise provided for in this act, but the term "statuary" as herein used shall be un- derstood to include only such profes- sional productions in marble, stone, alabaster, wood, ormetal,of a statuary or sculptor only. 576. Palladium. 577. Paper stock, crude, of every description, including all grasses, fibers, rags, waste, shavings, clippings, old paper, rope ends, waste rope, waste bagging, old or refused gunny bags or gunny cloth, and poplar or other woods, fit only to be converted into pa- per. 578. Parafine. 579. Parchment and vellum. 580. Pearl, mother of, not sawed or cut, or otherwise manufactured. 581. Pease, green, in bulk or in barrels, sacks, or similar packages. 582. Peltries and other usual goods and eifects of Indians passing or repass- ing the boundary line of the United States, under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may pre- scribe: Provided, That this emption shall not apply to goods in bales or other packages unusual among Indians, 583. Personal and household effects not merchandise of citizens of the United States dying in foreign coun- tries . 584. Pewter and brittannia metal, old, and fit only to be re-manufactured. 585. Philosophical and scientific apparatus, instruments and prepara- tions; statuary, casts of marble, bronze, alabaster, or plaster of Paris; paint- ings, drawings, and etchings, specially imported in good faith for the use of 27 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. any society or institution incoporated or established for religious, philosphi- cal, educational, scientific, or literary purposes, or for encouragement of the fine arts, and not intended for sale. 586. Phosphates, crude or native. 587. Plants, trees, shrubs, and vines of all kinds commonly known as nursery stock, not specially provided for in this act. 588. Plaster of Paris and sulphate of lime, unground. 589. Platina, in ingots, bars, sheets, and wire. 590. Platinum, unmanufactured, and vases, retorts, and other apparatus, vessels, and parts thereof composed of platinum, adapted for chemical uses. 591 . Plows, tooth and diskharrows, harvesters, reapers, agricultural drills, and planters, mowers, horserakes, cultivators, threshing machines and cotton gins. 592. Plumbago. 593. Plush, black, known com- mercially as hatters' plush, composed of silk, or of silk and cotton, and used exclusively for making men's hats. 594. Polishing-stones, and burnish- ing-stones. 595. Potash, crude, carbonate ot, or ' ' black-salts . ' ' Caustic potash , or hy- drate of, including refined in sticks or rolls. Nitrate of potash, or saltpeter, crude. Sulphate of potash, crude or refined. Chlorate of potash. Muriate of potash. 596. Profesional books, imple- ments, instruments, and tools of trade, occupation, or employment, in the actual possession at the time of persons arriving in the United States ; but this exemption shall not be construed to include machinery or other articles im- ported for use in any manufacturing establishment, or for any other person gr persons, or for sale. 597- Pulu. 598. Pumice. 599- Quicksilver. 600. Quills, prepared or unpre- pared, but not made up into complete articles. 601. Quinia, sulphate of, and all alkaloids or salts of cinchona bark. 602. Rags, not otherwise specially provided for in this act. . 603. Regalia and gems, statues, statuary, and specimens of sculpture where specially imported in good faith for the use of any society incorporated or established solely for educational, philosophical, literary, or religious purposes, or for the encouragement of fine arts, or for the use or by ord.er of any college, academy, school, seminary of learning, or public library in the United States ; but the term "regalia" as herein used shall be held to em- brace only such insignia of rank or office or emblems, as may be worn upon the person or borne in the hand during public exercises of the society or institution, and shall not include ar- ticles of furniture or fixtures, or of regular wearing apparel, nor personal property of individuals. 604. Rennets, raw or prepared. 605. Saffron and safflower, and ex- tract of, and saffron cake. 606. Sago, crude, and sago flour. 607. Salacine. 608. Salt in bulk, and salt in bags, sacks, barrels, or other packages, but the coverings shall pay the same rate of duty as if imported separately : Provided, That if salt is imported from any country which imposes a duty upon salt exported from the United States, then there shall be levied, paid, and collected upon such salt the rate of duty existing prior to the passage of this act. 609. Sauerkraut. 610. Sausage skins . 611. Seeds; anise, canary, caraway, cardamom, coriander, cotton, croton, cummin, fennel, fenugreek, hemp, hoarhound, mustard, rape, Saint John's bread or bene, sugar beet, mangel-wur- zel, sorghum or sugar cane for seed, and all flower and grass seeds; bulbs and bulbous roots, not edible; all the foregoing not specially provided for in this act. 612. Selep, or saloup. 613. Shells of all kinds, not cut, ground, or otherwise manufactured. 614. Shotgun barrels , forged , rough bored. 615. Shrimps, and other shellfish. 616. Silk, raw, or as reeled from the cocoon. 617. Silk cocoons and silk waste. 618. Silk worm's eggs. 619. Skeletons and other prepara- tions of anatomy. 620. Snails. 28 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. 621. Soda, nitrate of, or cubic nitrate, and chlorate of. 622. Sulphate of Soda, or salt cake, or niter cake. 623. Sodium. 624. Sparterre, suitable for mak- ing or ornamenting hats. 625. Specimens of natural history, botany, and mineralogy, when im- ported for cabinets or as objects of science, and not for sale. Spices : 626. Cassia, cassia vera, and cassia buds, unground. 627. Cinnamon, and chips of, unground. 628. Cloves and clove stems, unground. 629. Ginger-root, unground and not preserved or candied. 630. Mace. 631. Nutmegs. 632. Pepper, black or white, unground. 633. Pimento, unground. 634. Seeds of all kinds not speci- ally provided for in this act. 635. Spunk. 636. Spurs and stilts used in the manufacture of earthen, porcelain, and stone ware. 637. Straw. 638. Stone and sand: Burr stone in blocks, rough or manufactured, or bound up into millstones ; cliff stone, unmanufactured; freestone, granite, sandstone, limestone, and other build- ing or monumental stone, except marble, unmanufactured or undressed, not specially provided for in this act ; pumice stone, rotten stone, and sand, crude or manufactured. 639. Storax, or styrax. 640. Strontia, oxide of, and pro- toxide of strontian, and strontianite, or mineral carbonate of strontia. 641. Sugars all not above number sixteen Dutch standard in color, all tank bottoms, all sugar drainings and sugar sweepings, sirups of cane juice, melada, concentrated melada, and concrete and concentrated molasses, and molasses. 642. Sulphur, refined, lac or pre- cipitated, and sulphur or brimstone, crude, in bulk, sulphur ore,''as pyrites, or sulphuret of iron in its natural state, containing in excess of twenty- five per centum of sulphur, and sulphur not otherwise provided for. 643. Sulphuric acid. 644. Sweepings of silver and gold. 645. Tallow and wool grease, including that known commercially as degras or brown wool grease. 645. Tapioca, cassava or cassady. 647. Tar and pitch of wood, and pitch of coal tar. 648. Tea and tea plants. 649. Teazles. 650. Teeth, natural, or unmanufac- tured. 651. Terra alba. 652. Terra japonica. 653. Tin ore, cassiterite or black oxide of tin, and tin in bars, blocks, pigs, or grain or granulated - 654. Tinsel wire, lame, or lahn. 655. Tobacco stems. 656. Tonquin, tonqua, or tonka beans. 657. Tripoli. 658. Turmeric. 659. Turpentine, Venice. 660. Turpentine, spirits of. 661. Turtles. 662. Types, old, and fit only to be remanufactured . 663. Uranium, oxide and salts of. 664. Vaccine virus. 665. Valonia. 666. Verdigris, or subacetate of copper. 667. Wafers, unmedicated. 668. Wax, vegetable or mineral. 669. Wearing apparel and other personal effects (not merchandise) of persons arriving in the United States, not residents thereof, but this exemp- tion shall not be held to include arti- cles not actually in use and necessary and appropriate for the use of such persons for the purpose of their jour- ney and present comfort and conven- ience, or which are intended for any other person or persons, or for sale. 670. Wearing apparel and other personal effects (not merchandise) in actual use of residents of the United States returning thereto from foreign countries, not exceeding two hundred and fifty dollars in value and not in- tended for use of other persons nor for sale : Provided, however, That all the wearing apparel and other personal ef- fects of such persons so returning as may have been by them taken out of the United States to foreign countries 29 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. and which have not been advanced in value nor improved in condition by any process of labor or manufacture in such countries, shall be admitted free of duty without regard to their value upon their identity being established under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may pre- scribe. 671. Whalebone, unmanufactured. Wood : 672. I,ogs, and round unmanufac- tured timber not specially enumerated or provided for in this act. 673. Firewood, handle bolts, head- ing bolts, stave bolts, and shingle bolts, hoop poles, fence posts, railroad ties, ship timber, and ship planking, not specially provided for in this act. 674. Timber, hewn and sawed, and timber used for spars and in building wharves. 675. Timber, squared or sided. 676. Sawed boards, plank, deals, and other lumber. 677. Pine clapboards. 678. Spruce clapboards. 679. Hubs for wheels, posts, last blocks, wagon blocks, oar blocks, gun blocks, heading, and all like blocks or sticks, rough hewn or sawed only. 680. I^aths. 68 1. Pickets and palings. 682. Shingles. 683. Staves of wood of all kinds, wood unmanufactured : Provided, That if any export duty is laid upon the above-mentioned articles, or either ol them, all said articles imported from said country shall be subject to the duties exisiting prior to the passage of this act. 684. Chair cane, or reeds, wrought or manufactured from rattans or reeds. 685. Woods, namely, cedar, lig- num-vitse, lancewood, ebony, box, granadilla, mahogany, rosewood, satin- wood, and all forms of cabinet woods, in the log, rough or hewn ; bamboo and rattan unmanufactured ; briar root or briar wood, and similar wood un- manufactured, or not further manu- factured than cut into blocks suitable for the articles into which they are in- tended to be converted ; bamboo, reeds, and sticks of partridge, hair wood, pimento, orange, myrtle, and other woods, not otherwise specially pro- vided for in this act, in the rough, or not further manufactured than cut into lengths suitable for sticks for umbrellas, parasols, sunshades, whips, or walking canes; and India malacca joints, not further manufactured than cut into suitable lengths for the manufactures into which they are intended to be converted. 686. All wool of the sheep, hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, and other like animals, and all wool and hair on the skin, noils, yam waste, card waste, bur waste, rags, and flocks, including all waste, or rags composed wholly or in part of wool. 687. Works of art, the production of American artists residing tempora- rily abroad, or other works of art, in- cluding pictorial paintings on glass, imported expressly for presentation to a national institution, or to any State or municipal corporation, or incor- porated religious society, college, or other public institution, including stained or painted window glass or stained or painted glass windows ; but such exemption shall be subject to such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe. 688. Works of art, drawings, en- gravings, photographic pictures, and philosophical and scientific apparatus brought by professional artists, lectu- rers, or scientists arriving from abroad for use by them temporarily for exhi- bition and in illustration, promotion, and encouragement of art, science, or industry in the United States, and not for sale, and photographic pictures, paintings, and statuary imported for exhibition by any association estab- lished in good faith and duly author- ized under the laws of the United States, or of any State, expressly and solely for the promotion and encouragement of science, art, or industry, and not intended for sale, shall be admitted free of duty, under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury shall prescribe; but bonds shall be given for the payment to the United States of such duties as may be imposed by law upon any and all such articles as shall not be exported within six months after such importation : Prvvided, That the Secretary of the Treasury may, in his discretion, extend such period for a further term of six months in cases 30 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. where applications therefor shall be made. 689. Works of art, collections in il- lustration of the progress of the arts, science, or manufacttires, photographs, works in terra cotta, parian, pottery, or porcelain, and artistic copies of an- tiquities in metal or other material, hereafter imported in good faith for permanent exhibition at a fixed place by any society or institution established for the encouragement of the arts or of science, and all like articles im- ported in good faith by any society or association for the purpose of erecting a public monument, and not intended for sale, nor for any other purpose than herein expressed; but bonds shall be given under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe, for the payment of lawful duties which may accrue should any of the articles aforesaid be sold, trans- ferred, or used contrary to this provis- ion, and such articles shall be subject, at any time, to examination and inspection by the proper officers of the customs: Provided, That the privileges of this and the preceding section shall not be allowed to associations or cor- porations engaged in or connected with business of a private or commer- cial character. 690. Yams. 691. Zaffer. Sec. 3. That there shall be levied, collected, and paid on the importation of all raw or unmanufactured articles, not enumerated or provided for in this act, a duty of ten per centum ad valo- rem; and on all articles manufactured, in whole or in part, not provided for in this act, a duty of twenty per cen- tum ad valorem. Sec. 4. That each and every im- ported article, not enumerated in this act, which is similar, either in mate- rial, quality, texture, or the use to which it may be applied, to any article enumerated in this act as chargeable with duty shall pay the same rate of duty which is levied on the enumer- ated article which it most resembles in any of the particulars before men- tioned ; and if any nonenumerated ar- ticle equally resembles two or more enumerated articles on which different rates of duty are chargeable there shall be levied on such nonenumerated arti- cle the same rate of duty as is charge- able on the article which it resembles paying the highest rate of duty ; and on articles not enumerated, manufac- tured of two or more materials, the duty shall be assessed at the highest rate at which the same would be chargeable if composed wholly of the component material thereof of chief value; and the words "component material of chief value," wherever used in this act, shall be held to mean that component material which shall exceed in value any other single com- ponent material of the article ; and the value o± each component material shall be determined by the ascertained value of such material in its condition as found in the article. If two or more rates of duty shall be applicable to any im- ported article it shall pay duty at the highest of such rates. Sec. 5. That all articles of foreign manufacture, such as are usually or ordinarily marked, stamped, branded, or labeled, and all packages containing such or other imported articles, shall, respectively, be plainly marked, stamped, branded, or labeled in legible English words, so as to indicate the country of their origin ; and unless so marked, stamped, branded, or labeled they shall not be delivered to the im- porter except under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe. Sec. 6. That no article of imported merchandise which shall copy or simu- late the name or trade-mark of any domestic manufacture or manufacturer shall be admitted to entry at any cus- tom-house of the United States. And in order to aid the officers of the cus- toms in enforcing this prohibition any domestic manufacturer who has adopted trade-marks may require his name and residence and a description of his trade- marks to be recorded in books which shall be kept for that purpose in the Department of the Treasury under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury shall prescribe, and may furnish to the Department facsimiles of such trade-marks ; and thereupon the Secretary of the Treasury shall cause one or more copies of the same to be transmitted to each collector or other proper officer of the customs. Sec. 7. That all lumber, timber, 31 F. B. Vandbgrift & Co. hemp, manila, wire rope, and iron and steel rods, bars, spikes, nails, plates, tees, angles, beams, and bolts, and copper and composition metal which may be necessary for the construction- and equipment of vessels built in the United States for foreign account and ownership or for the purpose of being employed in the foreign trade, includ- ing the trade between the Atlantic and Pacific ports of the United States, after the passage of this act may be imported in bond, under such regula- tions as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe; and upon proof that such materials have been used for such purpose no duties shall be paid thereon. But vessels receiving the benefit of this section shall not be allowed to engage in the coastwise trade of the United States more than two months in any one year, except upon the payment to the United States of the duties upon which a rebate is herein allowed: Provided^ That ves- sels built in the United States for foreign account and ownership shall not be allowed to engage in the coast- wise trade of the United States. Sec. 8. That all articles of foreign production needed for the repair of American vessels engaged in foreign trade, including the trade between the Atlantic and Pacific ports of the United States, may be withdrawn from bonded warehouses free of duty, under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe. Sec. 9. That all articles manu- factured in whole or in part of im- ported materials and intended for ex- portation without being charged with duty and without having an internal- revenue stamp affixed thereto shall, under such regulations as the Secre- tary of the Treasury may prescribe, in order to be so manufactured and ex- ported be made and manufactured in bonded warehouses similar to those known and designated in Treasury Regulations as bonded warehouses, class two: Provided, That the manu- facturer of such articles shall first give satisfactory bonds for the faithful ob- servance of all the provisions of law and of such regulations as shall be prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury. Whenever goods manufactured in any bonded warehouse established under the provisions of the preceding paragraph shall be exported directly therefrom or shall be duly laden for transportation and immediate exporta- tion under the supervision of the proper oiScer who shall be duly desig- nated for that purpose, such goods shall be exempt from duty and from the requirements relating to revenue stamps. Any materials used in thetaanufac- ture of such goods, and any packages, coverings, vessels, brands, and labels used in putting up the same, under the regulations of the Secretary of the Treasury, be conveyed without the payment of revenue tax or duty into any bonded manufacturing warehouse, and imported goods maj', under the aforesaid regulations, be transferred without the exaction of duty from any bonded warehouse into any bonded manufacturing warehouse; but this privilege shall not be held to apply to implements, machinery, or apparatus to be used in the construction or repair of any bonded manufacturing ware- house or for the prosecution of the business carried on therein. No articles or materials received into such bonded manufacturing ware- house shall be withdrawn or removed therefrom except for direct shipment and exportation or for transportation and immediate exportation in bond under the supervision of the officer duly designated therefor by the collec- tor of the port, who shall certify to such _ shipment and exportation, or ladening for transportation, as the case may be, describing the articles by their mark or otherwise, the quantity, the date of exportation, and the name of the ^'essel. All labor performed and services rendered under these provisions shall be under the super- vision of a duly designated officer of the customs and at the expense of the manufacturer. A careful account shall be kept by the collector of all merchandise delivered by him to any bonded manu- facturing warehouse, and a sworn monthly return, verified by the cus- toms officers in charge, shall be made by the manufacturers containing a detailed statement of all imported 32 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. aerchandise used by him in the inaiiu- acture of exported articles. Before commencing business the )roprietor of any manufacturing ware- louse shall file with the Secretary )f the Treasury a list of all the irticles intended to be manufactured n such warehouse and state the "onnula ' of manufacture and the lames and quantities of the ingredi- 2nts to be used therein. Articles manufactured under these provisions may be withdrawn under such regulations as the Secretary of ±e Treasury may prescribe for trans- portation and delivery into any bonded warehouse at an exterior port For the sole purpose of immediate export therefrom. The provisions of Revised Statutes thirty-four hundred and thirty-three shall, so far as may be practicable, apply to any bonded manufacturing warehouse established under this act and to the inerchandise conveyed therein. Sec. id. That all persons are prohibited from importing into the United States from any foreign coun- try any obscene book, pamphlet, paper, writing, advertisement, circu- lar, print, picture, drawing, or other representation, figure, or image on or of paper or other material, or any cast, instrument, or other article of an immoral nature, or any drug or medi- cine, or any article whatever for the prevention of conception or for caus- ing unlawful abortion. No such articles, whether imported separately or contained in packages with other goods entitled to entry, shall be admitted to entry ; and all such articles shall be proceeded against, seized, and forfeited by due course of law. All such' prohibited articles and the package in which they are contained in the course of importation shall be detained by the ofiicer of customs, and proceedings taken against the same as hereinafter pre- scribed, unless it appears to the satis- faction of the collector of customs that the obscene articles contained in the package were inclosed therein without the knowledge or consent of the importer, owner, agent, or con- signee : Provided, That the drugs hereinbefore mentioned, when im- ported in bulk and not put up for any of the purposes hereinbefore specified, are excepted from the operation of this section. Sec. II. That whoever, being an of- ficer, agent, or employee of the Gov- ernment of the United States, shall knowingly aid or abet any person en- gaged in any violation of any of the provisions of law prohibiting import- ing, advertising, dealing in, exhibiting, or sending or receiving by mail obscene or indecent publications or representa- tions, or means for preventing concep- tion or procuring abortion, or other articles of indecent or immoral use or tendency, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall for every offense be punishable by a fine of not more than five thousand dollars, or by imprisonment at hard labor for not more than ten years, or both. Sec. 12. That any judge of any district or circuit court of the United States, within the proper district, be- fore whom complaint in writing of any violation of the two preceding sections is made, to the satisfaction of such judge, and founded on knowledge or belief, and if upon belief, setting forth the grounds of such belief, and supported by oath or afSrm- ation of the complainant, may issue, conformably to the Constitution, a warrant directed to the marshal or any deputy marshal in the proper district, directing him to search for, seize, and take possession of any such article or thing mentioned in the two preceding sections, and to make due and imme- diate return thereof to the end that the same may be condemned and destroyed by proceedings, which shall be con- ducted in the same manner as other proceedings in the case of municipal seizure, and with the same right of appeal or writ of error. Sec. 13. That machinery for repair may be imported into the United States without payment of duty, under bond, to be given in double the appraised value thereof, to be withdrawn and exported aftersaid machinery shall have been repaired; and the Secretary of the Treasury is authorized and directed to prescribe such rules and regulations as may be necessary to protect the reve- nue against fraud and secure the iden- tity and character of all such impor- 33 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. tations when again withdrawn and exported, restricting and limiting the export and withdrawal to the same port of entry where imported, and also limiting all bonds to a period of time of not more than six months from the date of importation. Sec. 14. That a discriminating du- ty of ten per centum ad valorem, in addition to the duties imposed by law, shall be levied, collected, and paid on all goods, wares, or merchandise which shall be imported in vessels not of the United States; but this discriminating duty shall not apply to goods, wares, and merchandise which shall be im- ported in vessels not of the United States, entitled, by treaty or any Act of Congress, to be entered in the ports of the United States on payment of the same duties as shall then be paid on goods, wares, and merchandise im- ported in vessels of the United States. Sec. 15. That no goods, wares, or merchandise, unless in cases provided for by treaty, shall be imported into the United States from any foreign port or place, except in vessels of the United States, or in such foreign ves- sels as truly and wholly belong to the citizens or subjects of that country of which the goods are the growth, production, or manufacture, or from which such goods, wares, or merchandise can only be, or most usually are, first shipped for transportation. All goods, wares, or merchandise imported contrary to this section, and the vessel wherein the same shall be imported, together with her cargo, tackle, apparel, and furniture, shall be forfeited to the United States; and such goods, wares, or merchandise, ship, or vessel, and cargo shall be liable to be seized, prosecuted, and condemned in like manner, and under the same regula- tions, restrictions, and provisions as have been heretofore established for the recovery, collection, distribution ,_ and remission of forfeitures to the United States by the several revenue laws. Sec . 1 6 . That the preceding section shall not apply to vessels or goods, wares, or merchandise imported in vessels of a foreign nation which does not maintain a similar regulation against vessels of the United States. Sec. 17. That the importation of neat cattle and the hides of neat cattle from any foreign country into the United States is prohibited : Provided, That the operation of this section shall be suspended as to any foreign country or countries, or any parts of such country or countries, whenever the Secretary of the Treasury shall officially deter- mine, and give public notice thereof that such importation will not tend to the introduction or spread of contagi- ous or infectious diseases among .the cattle of the United States; and the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized and empowered, and it shall be his duty, to make all neces- sary orders and regulutions to carry this section into effect, or to suspend the same as herein provided, and to send copies thereof to the proper offi- cers in the United States, and to such officers or agents of the United States in foreign countries as he shall judge necessary. Sec. 18. That any person convicted of a willful violation of any of the provisions of the preceding section shall be fined not exceeding five hun- dred dollars, or imprisoned not ex- ceeding one year, or both, in the dis- cretion of the court. Sec. 19. That upon the reimporta- tion of articles once exported of the growth, product, or manufacture of the United States, upon which no internal tax has been assessed or paid, or upon which such tax has been paid and refunded by allowance or draw- back, there shall be levied, collected, and paid a duty equal to the tax im- posed by the internal-revenue laws upon such articles, except articles manufactured in bonded warehouses and exported pursuant to law, which shall be subject to the same rate of duty as if originally imported. Sec. 20. That whenever any vessel laden with merchandise in whole or in part subject to duty has been sunk in any river, harbor, bay, or waters sub- ject to the jurisdiction of the United States, and within its limits, for the period of two years, and is abandoned by the owner thereof, any person who may raise such vessel shall be per- mitted to bring any merchandise re- covered therefrom into the port nearest to the place where such vessel was so 34 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. raised free from the payment of any duty thereupon, and without being ■obliged to enter the same at the cus- tom-house, but under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe. Sec. 21. That the works of manu- facturers engaged in smelting or refin- ing metals, or both smelting and refin- ing, in the United States may be designated as bonded warehouses under such regulations as the Secre- tary of the Treasury may prescribe: Provided, That such manufacturers shall first give satisfactory bonds to the Secretary of the Treasurj-. Ores or metals in any crude form requiring smelting or refining to make them readily available in the arts, imported into the United States to be smelted or refined and intended to be exported in a refined but unmanufactured state, shall, under such rules as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe, arid under .the direction of the proper officer, be removed in original pack- ages or in bulk from the vessel or other vehicle on which they have been imported, or from the bonded ware- house in which they may be, into the bonded warehouse in which such smelting or refining, or both, may be carried on, for the purpose of being ■smelted or refined, or both, without payment of duties thereon, and may there be smelted or refined, together with other metals of home or foreign production; Provided, That each day a quantity of refined metal equal to the amount of imported metal smelted or refined that day shall be set aside, and such metal so set aside shall not be taken from said works except for transportation to another bonded ware- house or for exportation, under the direction of the proper officer having charge thereof as aforesaid, whose certificate, describing the articles by their marks or otherwise, the quantity, the date of importation, and the name of vessel or other vehicle by which it was imported, with such additional particulars as may from time to time be required, shall be received by the collector of customs as sufficient evidence of exportation of the metal, or it may be removed under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe, upon entrj' and payment of duties, for do- mestic consumption. All labor per- formed and services rendered under these regulations shall be under the supervision of an officer of the cus- toms, to be appointed by the Secretary of the Treasury, and at the expense of the manufacturer. Sec. 22. That where imported ma- terials on which duties have been paid are used in the manufacture of articles manufactured or produced in the United States, there shall be allowed on the exportation of such articles a drawback equal in amount to the duties paid on the materials used, less one per centnm of such duties : Provided, That when the articles exported are made in part from domestic materials the imported materials, or the parts of the articles made from such materials, shall so appear in the comgleted arti- cles that the quantity or measure there- of may be ascertained : And provided further, That the drawback on any ar- ticle allowed under existing law shall be continued at the rate herein pro- vided. That the imported materials used in the manufacture or produc- tion of articles entitled to drawback of customs duties when exported shall , in all cases where drawback of duties paid on such materials is claimed, be identified, the quantity of such mate- rials used and the amount of duties paid thereon shall be ascertained, the facts of the manufacture or production of such articles in the United States and their exportation therefrom shall be determined, and the drawback due thereon shall be paid to the manufac- turer, producer, or exporter, to the agent of either or to the person to whom such manufacturer, producer, exporter, or agent shall in writing order such drawback paid, under such regu- lations as the Secretary of the Treas- ury shall prescribe : Provided further , That a drawback shall be allowed equal to the duty paid, less one per centum, upon any imported bagging made of jute butts, which shall have been used exclusively as outside cov- ering for lint cotton when exported, the rate and amount of such drawback to be ascertained under such regula- tions as the Secretary of the Treasurjr may prescribe. Sec. 23. That all merchandise im- 35 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. ported into the United States shall, for the purpose of this act, be deemed and held to be the property of the person to whom the merchandise may be con- signed ; but the holder of any bill of lading consigned to order and indorsed by the consignor shall be deemed the consignee thereof ; and in case of the abandonment of any merchandise to the underwriters the latter may be re- cognized as the consignee. Sec. 24. That all invoices of im- ported merchandise shall be made out in the currency of the place or country from whence the importations shall be made, or if purchased in the currency actually paid therefor to the vendor or vendors of the merchandise, shall con- tain a correct description of such mer- chandise, and shall be made in tripli- cate or in quadruplicate in cases of merchandise intended for immediate transportation without appraisement, and signed by the person owning or shipping the same, if the merchandise has been actually purchased, or by the manufacturer or owner thereof, if the same has been procured otherwise than by purchase, or by the duly author- ized agent of such purchaser, manu- facturer, or owner. Sec. 25. That all such invoices shall, at or before the shipment of the merchandise, be produced to the con- sul, vice-consul, or commercial agent of the United States of the consular district, or the adjoining district in cases where the Secretary of the Treasury shall so direct, in which the merchandise was manufactured or purchased, as the case may be, for export to the United States, and shall have indorsed thereon, when so pro- duced, a declaration signed by the purchaser, manufacturer, shipper, owner, or agent, setting forth that the invoice is in all respects correct and true, and was made at the place from which the merchandise is to be ex- ported to the United States ; that it contains, if the merchandise was ob- tained by purchase, a true and full statement of the time when, the place where, the person from whom the same was purchased, and the actual cost thereof, and of all charges thereon as provided by this act ; and that no discounts, bounties, or drawbacks are contained in the invoice but such as have been actually allowed thereon ; and when obtained in any other man- ner than by purchase, the actual market value or wholesale price thereof at the time of exportation to the United States in the principal markets of the country from whence exported ; that such actual market value is the price at which the mer- chandise described in the invoice is freely offered for sale to all purchasers in said markets, and that it is the price which the manufacturer or owner making the declaration would have received, and was willing to receive, for such merchandise sold in the ordinary course of trade, in the usual wholesale quantities, and that it includes all charges thereon as pro- \'ided by this act, and the actual quantity thereof; and that no different invoice of the merchandise mentioned in the invoice so produced has been or will be furnished to any one. If the merchandise was actually purchased,, the declaration shall also contain a statement that the currency in which such invoice is made out is that which, was actually paid for the merchandise by the purchaser. Consuls shall refuse certification of anj^ invoice not made in accordance with the pro- visions herein set forth. Sec. 26. That, except in case of personal effects accompanying the pas- senger, . no importation of any mer- chandise exceeding one hundred dollars in dutiable value shall be admitted to entry without the production of a duly certified invoice thereof, as re- quired by law, or of an affidavit made by the owner, importer, or consignee before the collector or his deputy, showing why it is impracticable to produce such invoice; and no entry shall be made in the absence of a cer- tified invoice, upon affidavit as afore- said, unless such affidavit be accom- panied by a statement in the form of an invoice or otherwise, showing the actual cost of such merchandise, if purchased, or if obtained otherwise than by purchase, the actual market value or wholesale price thereof at the time of exportation to the United States, in the principal markets of the country from which the same has been imported, the name of the consular district and the name of the 36 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. port or place from which the merchan- dise was procured; which statement shall be verified by the oath of the owner, importer, consignee, or agent desiring to make entry of the mer- chandise, to be administered by the collector or his deputy, and it shall be the duty of the collector or his deputy to examine the respondent under oath touching the sources of his knowledge, information, or belief in the premises, and to require him to produce any letter, paper, or statement of account in his possession, or under his control, which may assist the officers of cus- toms in ascertaining the actual value of the importation or any part thereof; and in default of such production when so requested, such owner, im- porter, consignee, or agent shall be thereafter debarred from producing any such letter, paper, or statement for the purpose of avoiding additional duty, penalty, or forfeiture incurred under this act, unless he shall show to the satisfaction of the court or the offi- cers of the customs, as the case may be, that it was not in his power to pro- duce the same when so demanded ; and no merchandise shall be admitted to entry under the provisions of this sec- tion unless the collector shall be satis- fied that the failure to produce a duly certified invoice is due to causes be- yond the control of the owner, con- signee, or agent thereof: Provided, That the Secretary of the Treasury may make regulations by which books, magazines, and other periodicals pub- lished and imported in successive parts, numbers, or volumes, and en- titled to be imported free of duty, shall require but one declaration for the en- tire series. And when entry of mer- chandise exceeding one hundred dollars in value is made by a statement in the form of an invoice, the collector shall require a bond for the production of a duly certified invoice in a penal sum which shall be double the amount of the estimated duties, and in the sum of one hundred dollars if the mer- chandise be free of duty, and when in the case of merchandise exerapt from duty or subject to a specific duty it shall be found, on liquidation of the entry thereof, that the amount of duty assessable thereon is not de- pendent upon the price value thereof, the bond given for production of a duly certified invoice may be canceled without requiring production of such invoice. Sec. 27. That whenever merchan- dise imported into the United States is . entered by invoice one of the fol- lowing declarations, according to the nature of the case, shall be filed with the collector of the port at the time of the entry by the owner, importer, con- signee, or agent, which declaration so filed shall be duly signed by the owner, importer, consignee, or agent, before the collector or before a notary public or other officer duly authorized by law to administer oaths and take acknowl- edgments, who may be designated by the Secretary or the Treasury to re- ceive such declarations and to certify to the identity of the persons making them, under regulations to be pre- scribed by the Secretary of the Treas- ury ; and every officer so designated shall file with the collector of the port a copy of his official signature and seal : Provided, That if any of the invoices or bills of lading of any mer- chandise imported in any one vessel, which should otherwise be embraced in said entry, have not been received at the date of the entry the declaration may state the fact, and thereupon such merchandise of which the invoices or bills of lading are not produced, shall not be included in such entry, but may be entered subsequently. DECLARATION OF CONSIGNEE, IM- PORTER, OR AGENT. I, , do solemnljr and truly declare that I am the consignee (im- porter or agent) of the merchandise described in the annexed entry and in- voice ; that the invoice and bill of lad- ing now presented by me to the collec- tor of are the true and only invoice and bill of lading by me re- ceived of all the goods, wares, and merchandise imported in the , whereof is master, from , for the account of any person who- soever for whom I am authorized to enter the same ; that the same invoice and bill of lading are in the state in which they were actually received by me, and that I do not- know or believe in the existence of any- other invoice or bill of lading of tb 37 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. 3aid goods, wares, and merchandise ; that the entry now delivered to the collector contains a just and true ac- count of the said goods, wares, and merchandise, according to the said in- voice and bill of lading ; that nothing has been, on my part, nor to my knowledge on the part of any other person, concealed or suppressed where- by the United States may be defrauded of any part of the duty lawfully due on I the said goods, wares, and mer- chandise ; that the said invoice and the declaration therein are in all re- spects true, and were made by the per- son by whom the same purports to have been made ; and that if at anytime here- after I discover any error in the said in- voice or in the account now rendered of the said goods , wares , and merchandise , or receive any other invoice of the same, I will immediately make the same known to the collector of this district. And I do further solemnly and truly declare that to the best of my knowledge and belief [insert the name and residence of the owner or owners] is (or are) the owner (or owners) of the goods, wares, and mer- chandise mentioned in the annexed entry; that the invoice now produced by me exhibits the actual cost (if pur- chased) or the actual market value or wholesale price (if otherwise obtained) at the time of exportation to the United States in the principal markets of the country from whence imported of the said goods, wares, and merchandise, and includes and specifies in detail the value of all cartons, cases, crates, boxes, sacks, and coverings of any kind, including the value of the usual and necessary outside sacks, crates, packing -boxes, and other outside cov- erings and straw or necessary packing materials, as hereinafter referred to, and all other costs, charges, and ex- penses incident to placing said goods, wares, and merchandise in condition, packed readj' for shipment to the United States, and no other or differ- ent discount, bounty, or drawback but such as has been actually allowed on the same. DECIvARATION OF OWNER IN CASES WHERE MERCHANDISE HAS BEEN ACTUALLY PURCHASED. I, , do solemnly and truly declare that I am the owner of the merchandise described in the annexed entry and invoice; that the entry now delivered by me to the collector of contains a just and true ac- count of all the goods, wares, and merchandise imported by or consigned to me in the , whereof , is master, from ; that the invoice and entry which I now produce contain a just and faithful account of the actual cost of the said goods, wares and mer- chandise, and include and specify in detail the value of all cartons, cases, crates, boxes, sacks, and coverings of any kind, including the value of the usual and necessary outside sacks, crates, packing-boxes, and other out- side coverings and straw or necessary packing materials, as hereinafter re- ferred to ; and all other costs, charges, and expenses incident to placing said goods, wares, and merchandise in con- dition, packed ready for shipment to the United States, and no other .dis- count, drawback, or bounty but such as has been actually allowed on the same ; that I do not know nor believe in the existence of any invoice or bill of lading other than those now pro- duced by me, and that they are in a state in whichlactually received them. And I further solemnly and truly de- clare that I have not in the said entry or invoice concealed or suppressed any- thing whereby the United States may be defrauded of any part of the duty lawfully due on the said goods, wares, and merchandise ; that to the best of my knowledge and belief the said in- voice and the declaration thereon are in all respects true, and were made by the person by whom the same purports to have been made ; and that if at any time hereafter I discover any error in the said invoice or in the account now produced of the said goods, wares, and merchandise, or receive any other in- voice of the same, I will immediately make the same known to the collector of this district. DECLARATION OP MANUFACTURER OR OWNER IN CASES WHERE MERCHAN- DISE HAS NOT BEEN ACTUALLY PURCHASED. I, , do solemnly and truly declare that I am the owner' (or manu- 38 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. facterer) of the merchandise described in the annexed entry and invoice ; that the entry now delivered by me to the collector of contains a just and true account of all the goods, wares, and merchandise imported by or consigned to me in the , whereof is master, from ; that the said goods, wares, and mer- chandise were not actually bought by me, or by my agent, in the ordinary mode of bargain and sale, but that nevertheless the invoice which I now produce contains a just and faithful valuation of the same, at their actual market value or wholesale price, at the time of exportation to the United States, in the principal markets of the country from whence imported for my account (or for account of myself or partners); that such actual market value is the price at which the mer- chandise described in the invoice is freely offered for sale to all purchasers in said markets, and is the price which I would have received, and was will- ing to receive, for such merchandise sold in the ordinary course of trade in the usual wholesale quantites; that the said invoice contains also a just and faithful account of all the cost of finishing such goods, wares, and merchandise to their present condition, and includes and specifies, in detail, the value of all cartons, cases, crates, boxes, sacks, and coverings of any kind, including the value of the usual and necessary outside sacks, crates, packing boxes, and other outside coverings and straw or necessary pack- ing materials, as hereinafter referred to, and all other costs and charges incident to placing said goods, wares, and merchandise in condition, packed ready for shipment to the United States, and no other discount, draw- back, or bounty but such as has been actually allowed on the said goods, wares, and merchandise ; that the said invoice and the declaration thereon are in all respects true, and were made by the person by whom the same pur- ports to have been made ; that I do not know nor believe in the existence of any invoice or bill of lading other than those now produced by me, and that they are in the state in which I actually received them. And I do further solemnly and truly declare that I have not in the said entry or invoice concealed or suppressed any- thing whereby the United States may be defrauded of any part of the duty lawfully due on the said goods, wares, and merchandise ; and that if at any time hereafter I discover any error in the said invoice, or in the account now produced of the said goods, wares, and merchandise, or receive any other invoice of the same, I will immediately make the same known to the collector of this district. Sec. 28. That any person who shall knowingly make any false state- ment in the declarations provided for in the preceding section, or shall aid or procure the making of any such false statement, as to any matter material thereto, shall, on conviction thereof, be punished by a fine not exceeding five thousand dollars, or by imprison- ment at hard labor not more than two years, or both, in the discretion of the court: Provided, That nothing in this section shall be construed to relieve imported merchandise from forfeiture by reason of such false statements, or for any cause elsewhere provided by law. Sec. 29. That the owner, con- signee, or agent of any imported mer- chandise which has been actually pur- chased may, at the time when he shall make and verify his written entry of such mechandise, but not afterward, make such addition in the entry to the cost or value given in the invoice, or pro forma invoice, or statement in form of an invoice, which he shall produce with his entry, as in his opin- ion may raise the same to the actual market value or wholsale price of such merchandise, at the time of exporta- tion to the United States, in the prin- cipal markets of the country from which the same has been imported; but no such addition shall be made upon entry to the invoice value of any imported merchandise obtained other- wise than by actual purchase; and the collector within whose district any merchandise may be imported or entered, whether the same has been actually purchased or procured other- wise than by purchase, shall cause the actual market value or wholesale price of such merchandise to be appraised, and if the appraised value of any article of 39 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. imported merchandise subject to ad valorem duty or duty based upon value, shall exceed the value declared in the entry, there shall be levied, collected, and paid, in addition to the duties imposed by law on such mer- chandise at its appraised value, an additional duty equal to the amount of the lawful rate Of duty upon the sum which the appraising officer, in order to make market value, adds to the value declared in the entry; that is to say, the lawful rate of duty upon the merchandise in question shall be doubled upon the amount added by the appraising officer to make market value, and such additional duties shall only apply to the particular article or articles in each invoice which are ad- vanced by the appraising officer to make market value. Such additional duties shall not be construed to be penal, and shall not be remitted and shall not be refunded on exportation of themerchandise, andshall not be subject to the benefit of drawback : Provided, That nothing herein contained shall restrict the powers of the general ap- praisers to review according to law the valuations made by local appraisers, and if such appraised value exceed the value declared in the entry more than forty per centum, such elitry shall be held to be presumptively fraudulent, and the collector of customs shall seize such merchandise and proceed as in cases of forfeiture for violations of the customs law; and in any legal proceedings which may result from such seizure the fact of such under- valuation shall be presumptive evi- dence of fraud, and the burden of proof shall be on the claimant to rebut the same, and forfeiture shall be ad- judged unless he shall rebut said pre- sumption of fraudulent intent by suffi- cient evidence : Provided, That the forfeitures provided for in this section shall appl}- to the whole of the mer- chandise or the value thereof in the case or package containing the partic- ular article or articles in each invoice which are undervalued : And provided further, That all additional duties, penalties, or forfeitures, applicable to merchandise entered by a duly certified invoice shall be alike applicable to goods entered by a pro forma invoice or statement in form of an invoice. The duty shall not, however, be as- sessed upon an amount less than the invoice or entered value. Sec. 30. That if any owner, im- porter, consignee, agent, or other per- son shall make or attempt to make any entry of imported merchandise by means of any fraudulent or false in- voice, affidavit, letter, paper, or by r means of any false statement, written or verbal, or by means of any false or fraudulent practice or appliance what- soever, or shall be guilty of any willful act or omission by means whereof the United States might or shall be deprived of the lawful duties, or any portion therof, accruing upon the merchandise, or any portion thereof, embraced or referred to in such invoice, affidavit, letter, paper, or statement, or affected by such act or omission, such mer- chandise, or the value thereof, to be recovered from the person making the entry, shall be forfeited, which forfeit- ure shall only apply to the whole of the merchandise or the value thereof, in the case or package containing the particular article or articles of mer- cftandise to which such fraud or false paper or statement relates ; and such person shall, upon conviction, be fined for each offense a sum not exceeding five thousand dollars, or be imprisoned for a time not exceeding two years, or both, in the discretion of the court. Sec. 31. That it shall be the duty of the appraisers of the United States, the general appraisers, and every of them, and every person who shall act as appraiser, or of the collector, as the case may be, by all reasonable ways and means in his or their power to ascertain, estimate, and appraise (any invoice or affidavit thereto or statement of cost, or of cost of pro- duction to the contrary notwithstand- ing) the actual market value and wholesale price of the merchandise at the time of exportation to the United States, in the principal markets of the country whence the same has been imported, and the number of yards, parcels, or quantities, and actual market value or wholesale price of every one of them, as the case may require, and to state for the information of the collector, the character and component materials of the merchandise. 40 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. Sec. 32. That when the actual market value, as herein defined, of any article of imported merchandise wholly or partially manufactured and subject to ad valorem duty, or to duty based in whole or in part on value, can not be ascertained to the satisfaction of the appraising officer, the appraiser or appraisers shall use all available means to ascertain the cost of production of such mer- chandise at the time of exportation to the United States, and at the place of manufacture ; such cost of production to include cost of materials and fabrication, all general expenses covering each and every outlaj^ of whatsoever nature incident to such production, together with the ex- pense of preparing and putting up such merchandise ready for shipment, and an addition of not more than eight per centum upon the total cost as thus ascertained; and in no case shall such merchandise be appraised Tipon original appraisal or reappraise- ment at less than the total cost as thus ascertained. Sec. 33. That section eight of the Act entitled "An Act to simplify the laws in relation to the collection of the revenues, " approved June tenth, eighteen hundred and ninety, be, and the same is herebj^, repealed, and section twelve ot the said last-men- tioned Act is hereby continued in force, but said section twelve of said Act shall, after the provision "that they shall not be engaged in any other business, avocation, or em- ployment, and may be removed from -office at any time by the President for inefficiency, neglect of duty, or mal- feasance in office, ' ' be amended so as to read "They shall be employed as boards of three or otherwise at such ports and within such territorial limits as the Secretary of the Treasury may from time to time prescribe, and are hereby authorized to exercise the powers and duties devolved upon them by this Act and to exercise, under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, such other super- vision over appraisements and classi- ications for duty of imported mer- chandise as he, the Secretary, may deem needful to secure lawful and uniform appraisements and classifica- tions at the several ports. At least one board of three of the general appraisers shall be on duty as a board of general appraisers daily (except Sundays and legal holidays^ at the port of New York, during the business hours prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury, at which port a place for samples shall be pro- vided, under such rules and regula- tions as the Secretary of the Treasury may from time to time prescribe, which shall include rules as to the classes of articles to be deposited, the time of their retention, and as to their disposition, which place of samples shall be under the control and direc- tion of the board or boards of general appraisers on duty at said port. Said board of general appraisers shall elect a president and vice-president from among their number, and by a majority vote ot the full board adopt rules and regulations for the conduct of business, subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury. Sec. 34. That the appraiser shall revise and correct the reports of the assistant appraisers as he may judge proper, anti. the appraiser, or at ports where there is no appraiser the person acting as such, shall report to the col- lector his decision as to the value of the merchandise appraised. At ports where there is no appraiser the certifi- cate of the customs officer, to whom is committed the estimating and collec- tion of duties, of the dutiable value of any merchandise required to be ap- praised, shall be deemed and taken to the appraisement of such merchandise. If the collector shall deem the ap- praisement of any imported merchan- dise too low he may orderareappraise- ment, which shall be made by one of the general appraisers, in the manner prescribed in- sections thirty-one and thirty-two of this act ; or if the im- porter, owner, agent, or consignee of such merchandise shall be dissatisfied with the appraisement thereof, and shall have complied with the require- ments of law with respect to the entry and appraisement of merchan- dise, he may, within five days there- after, give notice to the collector, in writing, of such dissatisfaction, on the receipt of which the collector shall at once direct a reappraisementof such 41 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. merchandise by one of the general ap- praisers. The decisionof the appraiser or the person acting as such (in cases where no objection is made thereto, either by the collector or by the im- porter, owner, consignee, or agent), or of the general appraiser in cases of reappraisement, shall be final and con- clusive as to the dutiable value of such merchandise against all parties inter- ested therein, unless the importer, owner, consignee, or agent of the mer- chandise shall be dissatisfied with such decision, and shall, within five days thereafter, give notice to the collector, in writing, of such dissatisfaction, or unless the collector shall deem the ap- praisement of the merchandise too low, in either case the collector shall trans- mit the invoice and all the papers ap- pertaining thereto to the board of three general appraisers, which shall be on duty at the port of New York, or to a board of three general appraisers who may be designated by the Secretary of the Treasury for such duty at that port or at any other port, which board shall examine and decide the case thus submitted, and their decision, or that of a majority of them, shall be final and conclusive as to the dutiable value of such merchandise against all parties interested therein, and the collector or the person acting as such shall ascer- certain, fix, and liquidate the rate and amount of duties to be paid on such merchandise, and the dutiable costs and charges thereon, according to law. Sec. 35. That the decision of the collector as to the rate and amount of duties chargeable upon imported mer- chandise, including all dutiable costs and charges, and as to all fees and ex- actions of whatever character (except duties on tonnage), shall -be final and conclusive against all persons inter- ested therein, unless the owner, im- porter, consignee, or agent of sUch merchandise, or theperson paying such fees, charges, and exactions other than duties, shall, within ten days after, ex- clusive of Sundays and State holidays, but not before such ascertainment and liquidation of duties, as well in cases of merchandise entered in bond as for consumption, or within a like period after the payment of such fees, charges, and exactions, if dissatisfied with such decision, give notice in writing to the collector, setting forth therein dis- tinctly and specifically and, in respect to each entry or payment, the reasons for his objections thereto, and if the merchandise is entered for consump- tion shall pay within ten days, exclu- sive of Sundays and State holidays, after said ascertainment and liquida- tion of duties, the full amount of the duties and charges ascertained to be due thereon. Upon such notice and payment the collector shall transmit the invoice and all the papers and ex- hibits connected therewith to the board of three general appraisers, which shall be on duty at the port of New York, or to a board of three general appraisers who may be designated by the Secretary of the Treasury for such duty at that port or at any other port, which board shall examine and decide the case thus submitted, and their de- cision, or that of the majority of them, shall be final and conclusive upon all persons interested therein, and the re- cord shall be transmitted to the proper collector or person acting as such, who shall liquidate the entry accordingly, except in cases where an application shall be filed in the circuit court of ap- peals for a review of any question of law arising in the case within the time and in the manner hereinafter pro- vided, within the time and in the man- ner provided for in section thirty-six of this act. Sec. 36. That if the owner, im- porter, consignee, or agent of any im- ported merchandise, or the Secretary of the Treasury, shall be dissatisfied, with the decision of theboard of general appraisers as hereinbefore provided, as to the construction of the law re- specting the classification of such mer- chandise and the rate of duty imposed thereon under such classification, they or ' either of them may, within thirty days next after such decision, and not afterwards, apply to the circuit court of appeals of the United States, within the district in which the matter arises for a review of the questions of law only involved in such decision. Such application shall be made by filing in the ofiice of the clerk of said circuit court of appeals a concise state- ment of the errors of law complained of, and a copy of such statement shall 42 F. B. Vande;grift & Co. be served on the collector, who shall forthwith transmit the same to the Sec- retary of the Treasury, or on the im- porter, owner, consignee, or ageilt, as the case may be. Thereupon said cir- cuit court of appeals, or any judge thereof, shall order the board of ap- praisers to return to said circuit court the record consisting of the invoice and the papers and exhibits connected therewith, originally transmitted by the collector to the said board, together with a certified statement of the facts found by them in the case, with their decision thereon. The board of ap- praisers shall not return to said circuit court of appeals any of the evidence taken by or before them in the case. The certified statement of findings of fact returned as aforesaid shall be con- clusive as to all questions of fact aris- ing in the case upon all parties and upon said circuit court of appeals ; but said circuit court of appeals, if it deems the statement of facts returned by the board of appraisers insuificient to enable the said court to determine the correctness of the decision of the said board of appraisers in respect to classification and rate of duty, may submit such question or questions as it deems advisable to said board of ap- praisers and require a further finding or findings of fact thereon, and the said board of appraisers shall forthwith, bn receiving an order from the said court for further findings of fact on questions submitted to them by the said court as hereinbefore provided, proceed to de- termine such questions and return their finding of fact thereon to the said cir- cuit court of appeals. The aforesaid returns shall constitute the record and case upon which said circuit court of appeals shall give priority to and pro- ceed to hear and determine the ques- tions of law only involved in such de- cisions of the said board of appraisers respecting the classification of such merchandise and the rate of duty im- posed thereon under such classifica- tion. The decision of the court shall be final and the proper collector or person acting as such shall liquidate the entry accordingly : Provided, how- ever, That in such cases the said cir- cuit courts of appeals shall have the same power to certify questions of law to the Supreme Court of the United States, and the said Supreme Court of the United States shall have the same powers to take control of such cases by Certiorari or otherwise after they have been brought into the said circuit courts of appeals that are now confer- red by law upon said courts or any of them in respect to subjects within the appelate jurisdiction of said circuit courts of appeals. All final judgments when in favor of the importer shall be satisfied and paid by the Secretary of the Treasury from the permanent in- definite appropriation provided for in section forty -five of this act. For the purpose of this section the circuit courts of appeals of the United States- shall be deemed always open, and said courts, respectively, may establish and from time to time alter rules and regu- lations not inconsistent herewith for the procedure in such cases as they shall deem proper. All hearings before said board of general appraisers upon questions of fact arising out of classificatiort of im- ported merchandise shall be public, and the proper officer of the United States and the importer, owner, consignee, agent, or person aggrieved by the decision undergoing investigation may be present and offer evidence. The person or his attorney making the protest in this act provided for, shall have the right to amend said protest at any time prior to ten days before hearing upon said protest. Sec. 37. That the general apprais- ers, or any of them, are hereby author- ized to administer oaths, and said gen- eral appraisers, the boards of general appraisers, the local appraisers, or the collectors, as the case may be, may cite to appear before them and exam- ine upon oath any owner, importer, agent, consignee, or other person touching -any matter or thing which they, or either of them, may deem material respecting any imported mer- chandise in ascertaining the dutiable- value or classification thereof ; and they, or either of them, may require the production of any letters, accounts, or invoices relating to said merchan- dise, and may require such testimony to be reduced to writing, and when so taken it shall be filed and preserved for use or reference until the final decision of the collector or said board 43 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. of appraisers shall be made respecting tlie valuation or classification of said merchandise, as the case may be. Sec. 38. That if anj^ person so ■cited to appear shall neglect or refuse to attend, or shall decline to answer, or shall refuse to answer in writing any interrogatories, and subscribe his name to his deposition, or to produce such papers, when so required by a general appraiser, or a board of gen- eral appraisers, or a local appraiser, or a collector, he shall be liable to a pen- alty of one hundred dollars ; and if such person be the owner, importer, or consignee, the appraisement which the general appraiser, or board of gen- eral appraisers, or local appraiser, or collector, where there is no appraiser, may make of the merchandise shall be final and conclusive ; and any person who shall willfully and corruptly ■swear falsely on an examination before any general appraiser, or board of general appraisers, or local ap- praiser, or collector, shall be deemed guilty of perjury; and if he is the owner, importer, or consignee the merchandise shall be forfeited. Sec. 39. That all decisions of the general appraisers and of the boards of general appraisers respecting values and rates of duty shall be pre- served and filed, and shall be open to inspection under proper regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury. All decisions of the general appraisers shall be reported forwith to the Secretary of the Treasury and to the Board of General Appraisers on duty at the port of New York, and the report to the Board shall be accompanied, whenever practicable, by samples of the mer- chandise in question, and it shall be the duty of the said Board, under the direction of the Secretary of th^ Treasury, to cause an abstract to be lAade and published of such decisions of the Appraisers as they may deem important, and of the decisions of each of the general appraisers and boards of general appraisers, which abstract shall contain a general description of the merchandise in question and of the value and rate of duty fixed in each case, with reference, whenever practicable, bj- number or other designation, to samples deposited in the place of samples at New York : and such abstract shall be issued from time to time, at least once in each week, for the information of customs officers and the public. Sec. 40. That whenever imported merchandise is subject to an ad valorem rate of duty, or to a duty based upon or regulated in any man- ner by the value thereof, the duty shall be assessed upon the actual market value or wholesale price of such merchandise as bought and sold in usual wholesale quantities at the time of exportation to the United States in the principal markets of the country from whence imported and in the condition in which such mer- chandise is there bought and sold in wholesale quantities, including the value of all cartons, inside wrappings, coverings, bands, and labels, but the value of the usual and necessary out- side sacks, crates, packing boxes, or other outside coverings, and straw or necessarj' packing material shall not be estimated as part of the value of said merchandise in determining the amount of duties for which it is liable : Provided, That if any pack- ages, sacks, crates, boxes, coverings, or packing materials of any kind used for covering, holding, or packing imported merchandise, whether duti- able or free, shall be of any unusual material, or salable as merchandise, or designed for use otherwise than in the bona fide transportation of such merchandise to the United States, then duty shall be levied and collected on said sacks, crates, boxes, coverings, or packing materials at the rate to which the same would be subject if separately imported. V Sec. 41. That when duties are\ based upon the weight of merchandise deposited in any public or private bonded warehouse said duties shall be levied and collected upon the weight of such merchandise at the time of its withdrawal and any merchandise de- posited in bond in any public or pri- vate bonded warehouse may be with- drawn for consumption within three years from the date of original impor- tation, on payment of the duties and charges to which it may be subject by law at the time of such withdrawal ; 44 F. B. Vandegrift* & Co. Provided, That nothing herein shall affect or impair existing provisions of law in regard to the disposal of perish- able or explosive articles. Sec. 42. This in all suits or infor- mations brought, where any seizure has been made pursuant to any act providing for or regulating the collec- tion of duties on imports or tonnage, if the property is claimed by any per- son, the burden of proof shall lie upon such claimant : Provided, That prob- able cause is shown for such prosecu- tion, to be judged of by the court. Sec. 43. That all fees exacted and oaths administered by officers of the customs, except as provided in this act, under or by virtue of existing laws ■of the United States, upon the passing ■of merchandise throtigh the customs or for the customs weighing and gaug- ing of the same be, and the same are hereby abolished ; and in case of entry of merchandise for exportation a decla- ration, in lieu of an oath, shall be filed, in such form and under such regula- tions as may be prescribed by the Sec- retary of the Treasury ; and the penal- ties provided in the thirtieth section of this act for false statements, in such declaration, shall be applicable to declarations made under this section : Provided, That where such fees, under existing laws, constitute in whole or in part, the compensation of any offi- cer, such officer shall receive, from and after the passage of this act, a fixed sum for each year equal to the amount which he would have been entitled to receive as fees for such services during said year. Sec. 44. That no allowance for ■damage to goods, wares, and merchan- dise imported into the United , States shall hereafter be made in the estima- tion and liquidation of duties thereon ; save as provided in Revised Statutes, section twenty-nine hundred and eighty-four as amended in section fifty-four of this act ; but the importer thereof may, within ten days after the date of the appraiser's return on the invoice abandon to the United States all or any portion of goods, wares, and merchandise included in any invoice, and be relieved from the payment of the duties on the portion so abandoned : Provided, That the portions so aban- doned shall amount to ten per centum or over of the total \'alue or quantity of the invoice ; and the property so abandoned shall be sold by public auction or otherwise disposed of for the account and credit of the United States, under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may pre- scribe. Sec. 45. That whenever it shall be shown to the satisfaction of the Secretary of the Treasur}- that, in any case of unascertained or estimated duties or pa3mients made upon appeal, more money has been paid to or de- posited with a collector of customs than, as has been ascertained by final liquidation thereof, the law required to be paid or deposited, the Secretary of the Treasury shall direct the Treas- urer to refund and pay the same out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated. The nec- essary monej'S therefor are hsx^y ap- propriated, and this appropriation shall be deemed a permanent indefini te appropriation ; and the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized to correct manifest errors in any entry or liquidation, for or against the United States, at any time within three years of the date of such entry, but not afterward.: Provided, That the Sec- retary of the Treasury shall, in his annual report to Congress, give a de- tailed statement of the various sums of money refunded under the pro- visions of this act or of any other act of Congress relating to the revenue, together with copies of the rulings under Which repayments were made. Sec. 46. That from and after the taking of this act no collector or other officer of the customs shall be in any- way liable to any owner, importer, consignee, or agent of any merchandise, or any other person, for or on account of any rulings or decisions as to the classification of said merchandise or the duties charged thereon, or the collection of any dues, charges, or duties on or on account of said mer- chandise, or any other matter or thing as to which said owner, importer, con- signee, or agent of such merchandise might, under this act, be entitled to appeal from the decision of said col- lector or other officer, or from any board of appraisers provided for in this act. 45 F, B. Vandegrift & Co. Sec. 47. That any person who shall give, or. offer to give or promise to give, any money or thing of value, directly or indirectly, to any officer or any employee of the United States, in consideration of or for any act or omis- sion contrary to law in connection with or pertaining to the importation, appraisement, entry, examination, or inspection of goods, wares, or mer- chandise, including herein any bag- gage, or of the liquidation of the entry thereof, or shall by threats or demands, or promises of any character, attempt to improperly influence or control any such officer or employee of the United States as to the performance of his official duties, shall on conviction thereof, be fined not exceeding two thousand dollars, or be imprisoned at hard labor not more than one year, or both, in the discretion of the court; and evidence of such giving or offering or promising to give satisfactory to the court in which such trial is had shall be regarded as prima facie evi- dence that such giving or offering or promising was contrary to law, and shall put upon the accused the burden of proving that such act was innocent and not done with an unlawful inten- tion. Sec. 48. That any officer or em- ployee of the United States who shall, excepting for lawful duties or fees, solicit, demand, exact, or receive from any person, directly or indirectly, any money or thing of value in connection with or pertaining to the importation, appraisement, entry, examination, or inspection of goods, wares, or merchan- dise, including herein any baggage, or liquidation thereof, on conviction there- of shall be fined not exceeding five thousand dollars, or be imprisoned at hard labor not more than two years, or both, in the discretion of the court. And evidence of such soliciting, de- manding, exacting, or receiving sat- isfactory to the court in which such trial is had shall be regarded as prima facie evidence that such soliciting, de- manding, exacting, or receiving was contrary to law, and shall put upon the accused the burden of proving that such act was innocent and not with un- lawful intention. Sec. 49. That any baggage or per- sonal effects arriving in the United States in transit to any foreign country may be delivered by the parties havmg it in charge to the collector of the pro- per district, to be by him retained without the payment or exaction of any import duty, or to be forwarded by such collector to the collector of the port of departure, and to be delivered to such parties on their departure for their for- eign destination, under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe. Sec. 50. That the collector or chief officer of the customs at any port of entry 6r delivery may issue a license to any person desiring to transact business as a custom-house broker. Such license shall be granted for a period of one year, and may be revoked for cause at any time by the Secretary of the Treasury. From and after the first day of June, eighteen hundred and ninety-four, no person shall transact business as a custom house broker without a license granted in accord- ance with this provision ; but this act shall not be so construed as to prohibit any importer from transacting business at a custom-house pertaining to his- own importations. Sec. 51. That all goods, wares, ar- ticles, and merchandise manufactured wholly or in part in any foreign coun- try by convict labor shall not be entitled to entry at any of the ports of the United States, and the importation thereof is hereby prohibited, and the Secretary of the Treasury is authorized to prescribe such regulations as may be necessary for the enforcement of this provision . Sec. 52. That the value of foreign coin as expressed in the money of ac- count of the United States shall be that of the pure metal of such coin of stand- ard value ; and the values of the stand- ard coins in circulation of the va- rious nations of the world shall be estimated quarterly by the Director of the Mint, and be proclaimed by the Secretary of the Treasury immediately after the passage of this act and there- after quarterly on the first day of Jan- uary, April, Jul}', and October in each year. Sec. 53. That section twenty- eight hundred and four of the Revised Statutes be amended so as to read : " Sec. 2804. No cigars shall be 46 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. imported unless the same are packed in boxes of not more than five hun- dred cigars in each box; and no entry of any imported cigars shall be al- lowed of less quantity than tl^ree thousand in a single package; and all cigars on importation shall be placed in public store or bonded warehouse, and shall not be removed therefrom until the same shall have been in- spected and a stamp affixed to each box indicating such inspection, and also a serial number to be recorded in the custom-house. And the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized 1:o provide the requisite stamps, and to make all necessary regulations for carrying the above provisions of law into eifect." From and after the first day of July, eighteen hundred and ninety-four, there shall be collected an internal- revenue tax on all cigarettes weighing not more than three pounds a thous- and, manufactured for sale or offered for sale in the United States, of one dollar and fifty cents per thousand. Sec. 54. That section twenty- nine hundred and eighty-four, of the Revised Statutes of the United States be, and the same is hereby, amended so as to read as follows: "Sec. 2984. The Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized, ex- cept as otherwise specially provided in this act, upon production of satisfac- tory proof to him of the actual injury or destruction, in whole or in part, of any merchandise, from any cause whatsoever, while the same remained in the custody of the officers ot the customs in any public or private ware- house under bond, or in the appraisers' stores undergoing appraisal, in pursu- ance of law or regulations of the Treasury Department, or while in transportation under bond from the port of entry to any other port in the United States, or while in custody of officers of the customs and not in bond, or while within the limits of any port of entry, and before the same have been landed under the supervision o± the officers of the customs, to abate or re- fund, as the case may be, out of any moneys in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, the amount of impost duties paid or accruing thereupon, and likewise to cancel any warehouse bond or bonds, or enter satisfaction thereon in whole or part, as the case may be." Sec. 55. That the Act of June twentieth, eighteen hundred and sev- enty-six (Nineteenth United States Statutes, page sixty), be amended by insertion after the words " imported into the United States by such firm or partnership ' ' the following : "Or for any other purpose connected with the general transaction of business at any custom-house." Sec. 56. That all acts and parts of acts inconsistent with the provis- ions of this act are hereby repealed, but the repeal of existing laws or modifications thereof embraced in this act shall not affect any act done, or any right accruing or accrued, or any suit or proceeding had or commenced in any civil cause before the said re- peal or modifications ; but all rights and liabilities under said laws shall continue and may be enforced in the same manner as if said repeal or modi- fications had not been made. Any offenses committed and all penalties or forfeitures or liabilities incurred prior to the passage of this act under any statute embraced in or changed, modi- fied, or repealed by this act may be prosecuted or punished in the same manner and with the same effect as if this act had not been passed. All acts of limitation, whether applicable to civil causes and proceedings or to the prosecution of offenses or for the re- covery of penalties or forfeitures em- braced in or modified, changed, or re- pealed by this act shall not be affected thereby ; and all suits, proceedings, or prosecutions, whether civil or crimin- al, for causes arising or acts done or committed prior to the passage of this act, may be commenced and prosecu- ted within the same time and with the same affect as if this act had not been passed : And provided further, That nothing in this act shall be construed to repeal the provisions of section three thousand and fifty-eight of the Revised Statutes as amended by the Act approved February twenty -third, eighteen hundred and eighty-seven, in respect to the abandonment of mer- chandise to underwriters or the salvors of property, and the ascertainment of duties thereon. 47 Alphabetical Schedule of the Wilson Bill as presented to the House "Representatives Decennber 19th, 1893. of Abbreviation n. o. p. f. means not otherwise provided for. By leference to any published schedulft of the tariff of l8( , the relative rates of duty can be compared_^ 238 Absinthe per proof gal $1.83 47 Acetate of lead white per lb. I2^c 585 Acadetaies, articles for tree 411 " books for free 1 Acid acetic 20% 361 ■' boracic free 361 " chemical free 2 " chromic 10% 3 " citric 20% 361 '' medicinal free I " pyroligneous 20% 643 " sulphuric free 4 '■ tannic per lb. 35 5 ' tartaric 20^ 361 Acids n. o. p. f free 362 Aconite free 363 Acorns, uuground free 229 " prepared per Id. 01^^ 477 Adhesive felt for sheathing free 364 Agates, unmanufactured free 314 •' buttons 25fr 634 Agricultural and garden seeds n.o. p. f. free 103 Alabaster, manufacture of 30^ 575 " statuary free 156 Albata 15 fc 365 Albumen free 305 Albumenized paper 25% 306 Albums, autograph and other 25^0 28 Alcohol, amylic 10% 6 " compounds, per gal. $2 and 25% 6 " perfumery, per gal. $2 and 25% 243 Ale, per gal. in bottles 30 c " " " " cask? isfo 366 Alizarine, artificial free 24 " assistant 30% 58 Alkalies 25% 58 Alkaloi-is 25% 219 Almonds, not shelled per lb., .03 shelled per lb 05 7 Alum, cakes, crystals, ground patent alum, etc 20% 7 Alumina 10% 7 •' sulphate of 20% 155 Aluminum 15% 158 " in leaf 30% 7 Aluminous cake 20% 567 Amber oil free 367 " unmanufactured free 369 Ammonia, carbonate of free " " muriate of free " " sulphate of. free 28 Amylic alcohol 10% 124 Anchors 25% 207 Anchovies 30^ 339 Augora goat skins, dressed and finished 20% 370 Aniline, salts of. free 371 Animals for breeding purposes free Par. Article. Rate. 372 Animals for exhibition free " for emigrants free " " for racing free 401 " integuments oi free 406 " carbon free 373 Annate, and all extracts thereof. free 567 Anise seed oil free 439 Anthracite coal free 374 Antimony ore free ■' " regulas free " sulphite of crude free 424 Antiquities, prior to 1700 free 126 Anvils 25%. 375 Apatite free 377 Apples, dried, etc free 376 " green or ripe free 33 Aqueous extract of opium 25^ 378 Argal free 156 Argentine 15% 140 Arms, muskets, muzzle-loading shotguns, sporting rifles, etc. ..25% 141 Arms, sporting, breech-loading shotguns and pistols 30% 238 Arrack per gal$i.8o 379 Arrow-root free 381 Arseniate of Aniline free 380 Arsenic free " " sulphide of. free 382 Art educational stops free 384 Articles crude for dyeing or tanning..free 385 " domestic manufacture returned free 357 " smokers 50% 383 Articles imported by the United States free 326 Artificial feathers and fruits for mil- linery purposes 35^ 37 Artificial sulphate of barytes 25% 46 Artist's colors 25% 138 " knives 35% 389 Asafetida free 386 Asbestos, unmanufactured free 349 Asbestos, manufactured 25% 387 Ashes, beet-root free " " lye of. free " " wood free 406 Ash , bone free 388 Asphaltum, crude free 306 Autograph albums 25% 125 Axles 25% 285 Axminster, Aubusson, Moquette and Chenille Carpets 35^ 390 Bacon and hams free 318 Bagatelle balls 50^ 269 Bagging, cotton 15^ 268 Bags, burlaps for grain 20^ 500 " cotton, old free 318 Balls, bagatelle 50% " " billiard 50^. 48 F. B. Vandsgrift & Co. Article. 391 Balm of Gilead free 685 Bamboo free 392 Bark, cinchona free " " yielding quinine iree 455 " cork free 16 " extracLs lor dyeing and tanning 10% 190 Barley, hulled 20% malt 25% " " patent 20% " " pearled 20% 178 Barrels, empty 20% 452 Bars, copper free 110 " iron and steel 30% 393 Baryta, carbonate of free " " sulphate of free 35 Barytes, earth per ton $3 37 " sulphate of, artificial 25^ 676 Bosswood lumber free 394 Bauxite free 240 Bay-rum per gal. jSi. " Bay-water per gal. $1. 97 Baads, glass strung 10% 196 Beans 20% 204 " castor per bushel .25 197 " prepared 305^ 656 " tonqua free 475 Bed, feathers and downs free 390 Beef free 243 Beer, in bottles per gal. .30c 243 " in casks, per gal. .15c 246 " ginger 20% 395 Beeswax free 396 Bells and bell metal, brotm f..free 338 Band or belting leather 10% 36 Berlin blue per lb. .06 238 Beverages, spirituous...:.... per gal. 1.80 62 Bicarbonate of Soda per lb )4 52 Bicarbonare of Potash 20% 318 Billiard Balls 50% 397 Binding twine made of istle, tampi- co fiber, etc free 399 Birds and fowls free 398 Birds, stuffed, not for hat ornaments, free 400 Bismuth free 82 Bisque ware, plain 35% 84 " " decorated 40% 238 Bitters per gal. $1.80 388 Bitumen, crude free 439 Bituminous coal free 38 Black, bone and lampblack 20% 38 Black, Ivory 20% 38 " vegetable 20% 8 Blacking 20% 127 Blacksmith's hammers and sledges, 25% 401 Bladders, unmanufactured free 349 " manufactured 25% 37 Blanc-fixe 25% 407 Bone char free 309 Books, blank 20^ 280 Blankets, wool, if valued ai not over 30 cents per lb 25% " Blankets, wool, if valued at over 30 cents per lb. and not over 40 cents per lb 3°% if valued at over 40 cents per lb. 35 fo [The above if over 3 yards in length to be classified as woolen cloth.] 325 Blasting caps 35% 536 Bleaching powder y^^ 679 Blocks, wood, rough free 653 Block tin "«« Rate. Par. Article. Rate„ 402 Blood, dried f,.gg 109 Blooms , 25% 41 Blue, ultraminp 20% 403 Blue vitriol f^^^ 41 Blue wash jq^ 36 Blues, Berlin, Chinese and Prus- sian, dry or in oil per lb... 06 676 Boards, sawed fre» 148 Bodkins 25% 112 Boiler, iron plate ^0%. 12S Boiler tubes, pipes, flues or sta3S..25^ 404 Bologna sausages free 405 Bolting cloths for milling purposes..free 129 Bolts and boltblanks 25% 406 Bone, ash free " " calcined or grounu free ■' " dust free 407 " char tor Qecolorizing sugarf...free 315 " buttons 25f„ 463 " cuttle-fish free 318 " dice 50^ " " checkers or chess men 50^ 350 " mfsof n. o. p.f. 25^ 408 Books, printed twenty years free 411 " maps, charts, lithographic prints, not over two copies for societies free 309 Books bound or unbound 25 % 309 " blank 20% 357 " cigarettt 50^ 412 " libraries, etc., oelonging to families from foreign countries..free 409 Books and music for the blind free " " in foreign languages free 339 Bookbinder's calfskins 20% " Boots, leather 20% 361 Boracic acid free 413 Borate of lime and soda free " Borax, crude free 9 " refined 20% 465 Bort free Bottles, see glass. 685 Box wood free 147 Brads, iron cut 25%' 415 Braids, chips, grass, willow, rattan and straw for hats free 235 Brandy per gal $1 80 14 " coloring for 50% 157 Brass, bars or pigs 10% " " clippings 10% " " old 10% 490 Brazil nuts free 414 " paste free 416 " pebbles, unmanufactured free 417 Breccia in blocks or slabs free 74 Bricks, glazed, enameled, orna- mented or decorated 30% 74 Bricks, not glazed, enameled, orna- mented or decorated 20 ^ 74 Bricks, encaustic 30% 75 " fire, magnesic per tonfi.oo 685 Briar wood and briar root free 642 Brimstone, crude free 418 Bristles free 419 Bromine free 158 Bronze, metal in leal .*. 30% " " powder 30^ 312 Brooms 20% 420 Broom-corn free 498 Brown grease for wool pressing, soap making, leather dressing, etc. ...free 312 Brushes 30% 49 F. B. Vandbgrift & Co. Article. Kate. Par. Article. 189 Buckwheat 20% (free from countries imposing no duty on products of U. S.) 468 Buds, cassia free 104 Building stone hewn dressed or pol- ished 20% 638 Building stone not hewn dressed or polished , free 611 BulbouB roots not edible free 421 Bullion, gold and silver free 281 Bunting, wholly or in part wool 40% 422 Burgundy pitch free 268 Burlaps not exceeding 60 inches in width nor 40 threads to square Inch 15% 231 Burnt starch per lb. .01 ^38 Burr-stone in blocks rough free " " " bound up into mill-stonesfree 193 Butter per lb. .04 " " substitutes, therefor per lb. .04 313 Button forms of, lasting, mohair or silk lofo 314 Buttons, agate 25% " " pearl and shell per line 10 and 15% 315 •' ivory, glass, bone or horn 25% 316 " shoe, made of papier mache....etc 25% 298 of silk, 40% 423 Cabbages free 685 Cabinet wood free 179 " furniture 25% 266 Cable of manilla or sisal grass lofo " " " hemp 10% 425 Cadmium free 566 Cake, oil free 426 Calamine free 339 Calf-skins, tanned or dressed 20^ " " •' book-binders' 20% 503 Camel's hair raw free 312 " " pencils 30% 427 Camphor, crude or refined free 6n Canary seed free 182 Candy, sugar 30% 325 Caps, percussion 30% " " blasting 35% 233 Capsican, unground, per lb 2^c 369 Carbonate of ammonia free 393 " " baryta free 306 Card boards 25% 130 Card — clothing, steel wire, and all other 30^ 310 Cards, playing, per pack, 10 and... 50% 267 Carpets, hemp and jute 20% " " wool, (seewool) .-. 271 " cork 30^ 178 Casks, empty 20% 626 Cassia, Cassia buds and Cassia vera unground free 233 Cassia, Cassia buds ground per lb. 3c 132 Castings of iron 25% 61 Castile soap 20% 428 Castoreum free 204 Castor beans and seed per bu..25c 25 " .oil pergal..35c 575 Casts, in marble, stone, alabaster, ■wood or metal when professional productions free 429 Cat-gut, whip gut and worm gut unmanufactured free 349 Cat-gut, manufacturers of 25% 63 Caustic, soda per lb.. 5c 233 Cayenne pepper per lb..2>^c 685 Cedar posts and ties free 685 "poles free 77 Cement, hydraulic, Portland, Roman, in barrels per 100 lb.= 8c 77 Cement in bulk per 100 lb. 7c " " all other 10^ 430 Cerium free 135 Chains, iron 30^ " " steel 30% 684 Chair-cane or reeds..... free 10 Chalk, French or precipitated 20^ 10 " prepared 10^ 431 " unmanufactured free 339 Chamois skins 20^ 432 Charcoal free 309 Charts, printed 25% 306 " lithographic 25% 194 Cheese 25% 361 Chemicals, acids free 58 " compounds and salts 25% 301 " wood-pulp lofo 258 Chenille carpets 40% " " curtains and other goods 40^ 187 Cheroots $3.00 per lb. and. ..25% 318 Chess-men 50^ 345 Cherry-juice if not over 18% of al- cohol p'jr gal. .50 " Cherry-juiceif over 18^ ofalcohol per gal. $1.80 225 Chickory;— root, prepared per lb. 2C 433 " " raw free 80 China, clay, wrought per ton f i 438 • " " uuwrought free China and Earthenware. 82 China, porcelain, parian, bisque, earthern, stone and crockery ware, plain white 35^ 82 Placques, ornaments, toys, charms, vases and statuettes, plain white, not decorated, of china, porcelain, parian, bisque, earthen or stone ware ; 35^ 83 Porcelain, parian, bisque, earth, stone or crockery ware, painted tinted, stained, enameled, printed, gilded or decorated 40% 83 Toys, charms, vases, placques, ornaments, and statuettes, painted, tinted, enameled, printed, gilded or decorated, made of China, porcelain, parian, bisque, earthen stone or crockery ware 40% 84 Porcelain, parian, bisque, earthen, stone and crockery ware, not specially provided for in- cluding lava tips for burners if decorated 40^ if not decorated 35^ 36 Chinese blue per lb. 6c 415 Chip, for ornamenting hats, etc free 35S " manufacturers of 25% 595 Chlorate of potash free 622 " " soda free 536 Chloride of lime free II Chloroform, per lb. 25c 226 Chocolate per lb.2c " " confectionery 25% " " sweetened 25% 436 Chromate of iron free 64 " of soda 20c 50 F. B. VANDBGRIIfT & Co. Par. Article. 2 Chromic acid io% 436 " ore free 39 Chromium colors per lb...2^c 170 Chronometers, and parts ot 10% 434 Cider free 187 Cigars and cigarettes per lb.. $3 and..25% 357 Cigarette books and paper 50% 392 Cinchona bark free 601 " " salts of free 627 Cinnamon and chips unground free 233 " " " ground. ..per lb.. .3c 571 " oil free 535 Citrate of lime free 3 Citric acid 20% 567 Citronella oil free 677 Clapboards, pine free 678 " spruce free 437 Clay, common blue free 80 " China per ton I2.00 357 " pipes, meerschaum 50% " " " common per gross. loc 80 Clays, wrought perton$i.oo 438 " unwrought free 555 Cliff-stone free 157 Clippings from brass 10$?, 175 " " copper 35^ 171 Cloaks 25% 331 Cloth, crinoline 30^ 313 Cloth, cut for buttons 10% 269 " gunny 15% 332 " hairseating 25^ 271 " oil and water proof. 30^ 405 " bolting ' free 130 Clothing, card, wire 3°% 628 Cloves and clove stems unground.... free 223 " " " " ground per lb. 3c 439 Coal, anthracite free " " bituminous free " " culm or slack free " " shale free 441 Coal-tar, crude free 12 " colors and dyes 20^ 647 " pitch free 441 " preparations of. free 442 Cobalt ore and oxide of free 443 Cocculas indicus free 444 Cochineal free 228 Cocoa butter perlb.3>^c 445 " crude and fibre free fibre mats and matting 20^ leaves fr^s nut oil free nuts free prepared per lb.2c ^^ shells free 617 Cocoons, silk free 26 Cod-liver oil 20% 446 Coffee free 229 " substitutes for perlb.i>^ perlb 49 " Orange mineral i|4fc perlb " " Redlead oi>^ per lb 50 " White lead and white paint containing lead 01^ perlb. 53 " Potash - Hydriodate, iodate, &c 25 perlb. 54 " Nitrateof ^c.per lb. (52 " Bichromate and chromate 20^ 155 " Prussiate red, or yellow 20% 14 Coloring for brandy 50% 6 Cologne water $2. 00 per gal. and 25^ 216 Comfits 30^ Common window glass see glass. 237 Compounds or preparations of spirits $1.80 per gal. 182 Confectionery 30% 138 Cook's knives and forks 35% 175 Copper, articles of. 35 ^^ 452 " bars, ingots and pig free 159 " bottoms and braziers copper.. 20% 451 " cement free 452 " Chili and other pigs free 450 " old and clippings free 449 " ores free 159 " pipes, rods and rolled plate3..20% " " sheathing and sheets 20% 58 " subacetateof. 25^ 403 " sulphate of. free 452 " n.o.p.f. free 453 Copperas free 305 Copying paper 2$% 454 Coral, marine, uncut free 266 Cordage, manilla and grass lofo " " hemp and tarred. 10% 238 Cordials f 1.80 per gal 51 Missing Page F. B. Vandegrift & Co. Par. Article, Rate. 254 Bleached c. per sq. yd. " Dyed, colored, stained, painted or printed 5^c. persq. yd. " All such cotton clothes not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted or printed, valued at over 10 cents per square yard. ..30^ " Bleached, valued at more than 12 cents per square yard 35^. " Dyed, colored, stained, painted or printed, valued at more than 15 cents per square yard 40% 255 The term cotton cloth or cloth as Used above, includes all woven fabrics of cotton in the piece, figured, fancy or plain, n. o. p. f. , the warp and tilling threads of which can be counted by un- ravelling or other practicable means. 256 Cotton clothing, ready-made, and articles of wearing apparel of every description , handker- chiefs and neckties or neckwear composed of cotton or other vegetable fibre, n. o. p. f 40% ushes, velvets, velveteens, cordu- roys and all pile fabrics com- posed of cotton or other vege- table fibre, not bleached, dyed, color stained, painted or printed 35^ " Bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted or printed ^ofr 258 Chenille curtains, table covers and all goods manufactured of cot- ton chenille 40 ^ 259 Stockings, hose and half hose, com- posed of cotton or other vege- table fibre, and shirts and drawers composed of cotton, valued at not more than $1 50 per dozen 30^ 260 Stockings, hose and half hose knit by hand, including such as are commercially known as seam- less stockings, hose or half hose, all of the above composed of cotton or other vegetable fibre 40^ 261 Cords, braids, boot, shoe and corset lacings, tape, gimps, gallons, webbing, goring, suspenders and braces, made of cotton or vegetable fibre and whether composed in part of India rub- ber or otherwise, and cotton damask, in the piece or other- wise 35% 262 All manufactures of cotton n. o. p. f., in this act, including cloth having Indis rubber as a com- ponent material 35% 40 Coverings, outside not dutiable 46 Crayons 25% 71 Cream of tarter 25^ 490 Cream nuts free 331 Crinoline cloth 30% 122 " wire 35% 148 Crochet needles 25% 567 Croton oil free Par. Article. Rate, 127 Crowbars, iron or steel 25% 81 Crucibles, plain 20^ 458 Cryolite free 7 Crystals of alum 20% 72 " lees 25^ 65 " soda per lb... .oj^ 459 Cudbear free 273 Cuffs and collars, linen 35^ 439 Culm of coal free 611 Cummin seed free 460 Curling slones and handles free 486 Currants free 461 Curry powder free 258 Curtains, chenille and cotton-lace..40^ 462 Cutch free 138 Cutlery, table 35% 463 Cuttle-fish bone fiee 525 Cyanite free 229 Dandelion roots, prepared, per lb, .i^c 464 " raw tree 487 Dates free 645 Degras free 59 Dentrifices 40% 231 Dextrine per lb, .01 465 Diamond dust free 336 Diamonds 15^ 465 Diamonds, rough free 465 Diamond engravers and glaziers free 318 Dice 50 fo 495 Disks for optical instrr(ments free 58 Distilled oils 2$% 466 Divi-divi free 319 Dolls and doll heads 25^ 283 Dolmans, wool 45^ 385 Domestic articles returned (Sec. 19) free 326 Downs dressed or manufactured 35 ^ 475 " for beds free 326 " manufactures of. 35% 467 Dragon's blood free 641 Drainings, sugar free 318 Draughts 50^ Sec. 19 Drawback allowance 306 Drawing paper 25 fo 284 Dress trimmings 40% 281 Dress trimmings, wool or worsted, 40% 263 Dressed line per lb,..i^c 402 Driedblood free 468 " lichens and insects free 163 Dross from burnt pyrites free 163 " lead 15^ 292 Druggets 25% 46S Drugs, such as balsams, barks, buds, bulbs, leaves, herbs, gums, nuts, roots, seeds, etc free 465 Dust, diamond free 157 Dutch-metal chippings 10^ 158 " inleaf. 30^ 291 Dutch wool carpets 25^ 526 Dye lac free 16 Dyeing,articles for 10% 468 " " crude free 366 Dyes, alizarine free 12 Dyes, coal-tar 20%. 16 Dyewoods.extractsaud decoctions, 10^ 35 Earth, barytes per tori, $3.00 81 to 84 Earthen ware See China 81 " Common yellow and brown, plain or embossed. ..20^ 40 Earths, ochery per lb,..i^c " " sienna and umber, " .i^c 685 Ebony wood free 274 Edgings, cotton, flax or jute 40^ 53 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. Par. Article. Rate. 382 Educational art stops free 412 Effects, household, returned free 582 " and peltries of Indians on frontier line free 469 Eggs and yolks of. free 149 Electrotype plates 25% 274 Embroideries, cotton, flax orjute...4o^ 299 " silk 50% 320 Emery, grains or ground per lb, .01 470 " ore free 320 " Pulverized or refined, per lb 01 339 Enameled leather 20% 142 " ironware 35^ 99 " fusible .25% 76 Encaustic, brick and tile 25% 149 Engraved steel plates 25% 465 Engravers' diamonds free 309 Engravings 25^ 307 Envelopes, paper 20% 541 Epsom salts free 136 Erasers, steel, and parts of. 45% 471 Ergot free 15 Essences, fruit per lb, $1.00 58 Essential oils 25% 309 Etchings 25% 15 Ethers, all kinds per lb, |i. 00 " " nitrous, spirits of " .20 " " sulphuric " .35 468 Excresences.: free 688 Exhibition, paintings and statuary for tree 323 Explosive substances, valued at 20 cents per lb per lb, .05 " Explosive substances, valued at over 20 cents per lb per lb, .08 58 Expressed oils free 373 Extract of annatto free 16 " barks and dye woods for \ tanning 10% " " hemlock bark 10^ " " indigo 10^ 21 " licorice per lb, .05 240 " madder free 244 " malt per gal. .30 223 " meat 20% 33 " opium 2sfo 373 " rocoa free 605 " safflower and saffron free 16 Extracts and decoctions for dyeing and tanning 10^ 96 Eye-glasses 35^ " Eye-glass frames 35% 495 " discs free 61 Fancy soap 35% 472 Fans, palm-leaf. free 473 Farina free 474 Fashion plates free 312 Feather dusters 30^ 475 Feathers, crude free 326 " artificial 35% 475 " forbeds free 326 " ornaments 35^ 476 Feldspar free 477 Felt, adhesive free 302 " sheathing and roofing 10^ 673 Fence posts, wood free 175 " wire, iron an* steel 35^ 567 Fennel oil free 611 " seed free " Fenugreek seed free 496 Fiber tampico free 54 Par. Article. Rate. 468 Fibers and grasses free 478 Fibrin free 213 Figs 20% 220 Filberts, not shelled per lb, .02 " " shelled " .04 139 Files and file blanks 35% 305 Filtering paper 25% 140 Fire-arms, muzzle loading 25^ 141 " breech loading 30^ 308 Fire boards, paper for 20% 75 Fire brick per ton, |i.oo 321 Firecrackers per lb, .08 479 Fish, fresh free 211 " cans, pay additional duty per dozen quarts 08 463 " cuttle-bone free 469 " eggs free 480 " for bait free 17 " glue or isinglass 25^ 209 " herrings per lb, ^c 210 " in cans, except sardines, an- chovies, etc 25% 209 " frozen or packed in ice, per lb... .>^c 207 " in oil 2°% 20S " pickled, salted, smoked or prepared per lb, ^c 150 " plates, iron or steel 25% 615 " shell or shrimp free 481 " skins free 208 " smoked, dried, salted, etc, per lb I^c 17 " sounds 25% 269 Flax, bagging 15% " burlaps, (see burlaps) 274 " edging " " embroidered articles 40^ " " embroidered handkerchiefs. ..40% 270 " gill netting 30% 269 " gunny cloth '. 15^ 263 " hackled per lb,..i^c 274 " hem-stitchedhandkerchief»...4o% 274 " insertings and laces 40^ " " lace window curtains 40^ 275 " manufactures of n. o. p. f 30^ 270 " nets 30% 274 " neck rufflings 40% 496 " not hackled free " " or hemp tow free 205 " seed per bushel, .20 27 " seed oil per gal, .15 274 " rufflings or ruchiags 40% 270 " seines 30% 496 •' straw free 274 " tamboured articles 40% 272 ' ' thread or yarn valued at not over 13 cents per lb 25^ " " thread or yarn valued at over 13 cents per lb 30^ 270 " webs 30^ 496 " waste frer 482 Flint free 86 " bottle glassware 30^ 482 " stones, ground free 139 Floats 35 ^„ 686 Flocks, woollen free 483 Floor matting free 296 Floss silk 20% 192 Flour, rice perlb,..iXc 189 " rye 20^ (Free from any country not im- posing duty on U. S. products.) 606 Flour, sago free F. B. Vandegrift & Co. Par. Article. R»te. 186 Flour, snuff per lb, .40 189 " wheat 20^ (or free as above) 326 Flowers, artificial 35^ 642 " of sulphur free 634 Flower seeds..."" free 128 Flues, boiler 25^ 223 Fluid extract of meat.: 20^ 125 Forgings for axles 25% 138 Forks 35% 313 Forms for buttons 10% 484 Fossils free 399 Fowls, land and water, live free 104 Free stone, dressed and polished 20% 638 " not dressed and polished, free 298 Fringes, silk 40% 284 " wool 40% 46 Frostings 25 fo 217 Fruit, in their own juices 20% 488 " green .' free 15 " essences and ethers per lb. fi 245 " juice, if only 18% of alcohol, per gal. .50 " " juice, if over 18% of alcohol, per gal. jfi.So 485 " plants free 216 " preserved 30% 488 " green, n. o. p. f free 322 " Fulminates and fulminating powders 30% 327 Fur, dressed on the skin 20^ 333 " hat bodies 30^ 327 " hatters 20% 333 " hats 30% 351 Fur manufactures of 30% 492 " skins, not dressed free 179 Furniture, cabinet and house 25 % 28 Fusel oil 10% 99 Fusible enamel 25% 261 Galloons, cotton 35% 298 " silk 40% 284 '• wool 40% 117 Galvanized iron 35% 493 Gambler free 634 Garden seeds : free 686 Garnetted waste free 85 Gasretorts 20% 17 Gelatine 25% 156 German silver 25% 391 Gilead, balm of. free 270. Gill-netting flax 30% 261 Gimps, cotton '. 35% 284 " wool 40% 246 Ginger ale and beer 20^ 242 " wines pur gal,. 50c " " " per case, $1.60 629 " root, unground free 233 " " ground per lb. .03c 591 Gins, cotton free 238 Gin per gal, $1.80 86 Glassware, plain, green and colored 30^ " Moldedor pressed 30^ " FlintandWme 30% The above including bottles, vials, demijohns and carboys (cov- ered or uncovered) empty or filled, not otherwise provided for 30% 87 Glass Articles, cut, engraved, paint- ed, colored, printed, stained, decorated, silvered or gilded not including plate glass, silver- Par. Article. Rate. ed or looking-glass plates 35^ 88 Glass Bottles, decanters or other vessels or articles of glass, cut, engraved, painted, colored, printed, stained, etched or oth- erwise ornamented or deco- rated, except such ss have ground necks or stoppers, not otherwise provided for, includ- ing porcelain or opal glassware..35 fo The above, if filled, shall pay regu- lar duty in addition to con- tents. 89 Glass, Unpolished Cylinder Crown and Common Window Glass: Not exceeding 16x24 in. sq. . . i c. per lb. 24x30 " ...lyi " 24x36 '• ...i^ " " 24x36 i}4 go Glass Polished Cylinder and Crown Glass: • Not exceeding 16x24 in. sq...2>^c. sq. ft " " 24x30 " ...4 " " " 24x60 " ...15 " " " 24x60 " ...20 " 91 Glass Fluted, rough or rolled plate glass (not including crown, cylinder and common window glass) : Not exceeding 16x24 ^^- sq ^c. sq. ft " 24x30 in. sq...ic. sq. ft above 24x30 " ...\yic. " And an additional duty at above rates on any excess of weight over 100 pounds for 100 square feet at same rate. 92 Glass Cast polished plate glass, fin- ished or unfurnished, and not silvered or fluted or roled plate glass, when ground, smoothed or otherwise obscured: Not exceeding 16x24 in. sq. ... 5 sq. ft 24x30 " ... 8 " " 24x60 " ...18 " " " 24x60 " ...30 " 93 Glass Cast polish«d plate glass sil- vered: Exceeding 144 square inches and not exceeding 16x24 in. sq. ... 6c. sq. ft " " 24x30 " ...10 " " " 24x60 " ...20 " " " 24x60 " ...35 " 93 Glass Looking glass plates: Exceeding 144 square inches and not exceeding 16x24 in. sq. ... 6c. sq. ft " " 24x30 " ...10 " " " 24x60 " ...20 " " " 24x60 " ...35 " 94 Glass lyooking glass plates and plate glass when silvered and framed, shall pay in addition to above rates, the duty applicable to the frames. 95 Glass Cast polished plate glass, sil- vered or unsilvered, and cylin- der, crown or common window glass when ground, obscured, frosted sanded, enameled, be- veled, etched, embossed, en- graved, flashed, stained , colored, painted or otherwise orna- mented or decorated, shall pay 55 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. Par. Article. Rate. an additional duty of ten per cent. 315 Glass buttons 25% 96 Glass sp2Ctacles, goggles and eye glasses, and frames for the same 35% 96 Glass, opera glasses and other opti- cal instruments, and frames 35% 97 Glass, beads, loose, strung or carded 10% 98 Glass, lenses or pebbles, wholly or partly mfd 35% 99 Glass, fusible enamel 25% 99 Glass slides for magic lanterns 25% 100 Glass windows, stained or painted . . .35 ^ 100 Glass, window glass stained or painted 35% 100 Glass mirrors exceeding 144 square inches, with or without frames or cases 35% 100 Glass when bent, pays same duty as when flat 100 Glass, mfs of n. o. p. f 35% 494 Glass, old broken and which cannot be cut for use, fit only for re- manufacture free 171 Glass watch glasses 25^0 495 Glass plates or disks for optical in- struments, rough, cut or un- wrougtit free 465 Glaziers' diamonds free 165 " lead perlb...i>{c 182 Glucose or grape sugar 15% 17 Glue, fish or isinglass 25^ 505 " stock free 18 Glycerine, crude per lb. .01 " " refined " .03 686 Goat-hair, raw free 504 Goat-skins," free 175 Gold, manufactures of n. o. p. f. 35% 497 " beaters' molds and skins free 421 " bullion free 160 " buUionsof 25% 447 " coins free 161 " leaf 35% 550 " medals, such as trophies free 573 " ore free 167 " pens 25% 42 " size 25% 644 " sweepings free 160 " thread 25% 261 Goring cotton 35^ 298 Gorings.silk 40% 284 " wool 40% 268 Grain bags of burlaps 20% 685 Granadilla-wood free 104 Granite 20% 653 Granulated tin free 182 Grape sugar or glucose 15% 212 Grapes 20^0 415 Grass for milliners' use free 350 " manufacture of. 2$fo 611 " seeds free 496 " sisal free 496 Grasses and fibers, unmanufactured free 498 Grease, oil for dressing leather free 645 " from wool free 105 Grindstones, finished or unfin- ished pertonfi.75 221 Ground beans, not shelled ...per lb. .01 " " " shelled perlb.,oiX 499 Guano free Par. Article. Rate. 231 Gum, British per lb .01 468 " resin and crude free 231 " substitute per lb. .01 140 Gun barrels 25% 614 Shot gun barrels forged rough bored free 679 " blocks free 329 " wads of all kinds 25^ 323 " powder valued at not over 20 cts. per lb per lb .05 " powder valued at over 20 cts. per lb per lb .08 140 Guns, muskets, muzzle - loading shotguns and pistols and parts thereof 25% 141 Guns, sporting, breech-loading shotguns and pistols and parts thereof 30^ 500 Gunny bags, old free 269 " cloth 15% 500 " " old and refuse free 429 Gut, cat, whip and worm, not fur- ther manuf'd. than in strings and cords free 349 " whip and worm, manufactures of 25^ 501 Guts, salted free 502 Gutta-percha free 79 Gypsum orplaster of Paris, ground..io% " " calcined 15% 686 Hair of the Alpaca and other like animals, raw free 503 " of other animals free 331 " cloth, crinoline 30% 332 " " seating 25^ 503 " cattle and horse free 330 " human, cleaned or drawn 20^ 351 " " manufactures of. 30^ 503 " " raw free 312 " pencils and brushes 30% 127 Hammers and sledges, black- smiths' 25% 390 Hams free 299 Handkerchiefs, silk $0% 256 " cotton, flax, jute or hemp '. 40% 673 Handle-bolts free 460 Handles, curling-stone free 100 Hand mirrors 35^ 308 Hangings, paper 20% 351 Hard rubber manufactures 30^ 591 Harrows, harvesters and horse- rakes free Hassocks, see wool carpets. 333 Hats and hat bodies, fur 30^ 326 " women's materials for 35% 168 " pins 20% Hats of wool, see wool. 122 Hat wire 35% 327 Hatters' fur not on the skin 20^ 132 " irons 25^ 593 " plush for men's hats free 198 Hay per ton $2.00 679 Heading-blocks free 673 " bolts free 16 Hemlock bark, extracts of 10% 676 " lumber free 269 Hemp bagging for cotton 15% 268 " burlaps, not exceeding 60 in. in width and not over 40 threads to sq. in -. i$f„ 266 " cables 10% 56 F. B . VANDEfTRIFT & Co. Par. Article. 267 Hemp carpets and carpeting 10% 266 " cordage and twine except binding twine 10% 269 " gunny-cloth 15% 496 " not hackled free 264 " hackled per lb... ic 273 " hydraulic hose 35% 264 " line of dressed per lb. .01 275 " manufactures of n. o. p. f....3o% ■611 " seed free 29 " " oil per gal. IOC 496 " tow of. free 272 " threads and yarns not cost- ing over 13 Cts. per lb 25 <^ Costing over 13 cts. per lb. " 30% 496 " waste free 274 Hem-stitched handkerchiefs, all ...40% 468 Herbs free 32 Herring oil and other fish oil 25% 209 Herrings pickled, frozen or salted per lb. YzC 505 Hide cuttings, raw free ^06 " rope free 504 Hides, raw free 129 Hinge-blanks and hinges 25% ^11 Hoarhound seed free 144 Hob-nails 25% 188 Hogs, live 20% 134 Hollow-ware cast 30^ 507 Hones free 199 Honey per gal. .10 ^08 Hoofs, unmanufactured free 114 Hoop-iron and steel 30^ 175 Hoops, iron or steel 35% ■673 Hop-poles free 509 " roots for cultivation tree 200 Hops per lb. .08 315 Horn buttons 25% 350 " manufactures of 25^ 510 Horns, unmanufactured, strips and tips free 503 Horse hair free 188 Horses, live 20% 371 " for breeding purposes free 146 Horseshoes 25% 144 Horseshoe nails :....25% 273 Hose, hydraulic 35% Hosiery, according to material. 179 House, furniture, wood 25% 412 Household effects free 679 Hubs for wheels free 330 Human hair, cleaned, unmfd 20% 351 " " manufactures of. 30% 503 " " raw free 138 Hunting-knives 35 % 595 Hydrate of potash, crude or refined free 63 Hydrate of Soda per lb. .oo>^ 273 Hydraulic hose 35% 53 Hydriodate of potash per lb. 2C. 511 Ice free 596 Implements, professional free 685 India malacca-joints cut into lengths free ^12 " rubber crude and milk of.. .free " " " refuse or scrap of. free 540 Indian madder free 582 Indians, effects and peltries of free 513 Indigo, carmined free " " extracts and pastes of free 351 Indurated fiber-wares 3°% 452 Ingots copper free 1^4 " for locomotive, or railway tires lifo Par. Article. Rate. 120 Ingots steel and cogged 25% 290 Ingrain carpets, 3-ply 30% 291 " " 2-" 25% 19 Ink and ink powders 20% 19 " printers 20% 468 Insects, dried free 174 Insertings, cotton, flax or jute 40% 688 Instruments philosophical for scien- tists ' '. free 401 Integuments of animals free 556 Inventions, models of free 274 lodate of potash per lb. .25 " Iodide of potash per lb. .25 514 Iodine, crude and resublimed free 20 Iodoform per lb. |i. 515 Ipecac free 516 Iridium free 175 Iron, articles of n. o. p. f. 35;% 124 " anchors 25% 113 " and steel, forged 30% III " angles 35% 126 " anvils..... ....25% 125 " axle bars and blank 25% I" " axles fitted in wheels 25% " " " forged and parts of. 25% no ■" bar 30% 114 " band 30% 175 " barrel-hoops 35% 111 " beams 35% 109 " billets 25% 127 " Blacksmiths' hammers and sledges 25$^ 109 " blooms 25% 112 " boiler or other plate 30% 128 " " tubes, pipes, flues and stays 25% 129 " Bolt-blanks and bolts 25 % 147 " brads, cut 25% III " building and structure forms35% 124 " car-tires 25% 175 " car truck channels 35% 132 " cast, n. o.p. f isfo 133 " " and malleable 25% 132 " castingsof. 25% 135 " chains 30% 436 " chromate of. free III " columns and posts 35% 116 " corrugated 35% 127 " crowbars 25^ 123 " damage allowances prohibited III " deck and bulb beams izfo 108 " ferro manganese 10% " " " silicon 22>^% 115 " flat rails 25% 113 " forgings 3°% 125 " " for axles 25% 117 " galvanized 35% III " girders 35% 132 " hatters' 25% 129 " hinge-blanks and hinges 25% 114 " hoop 30% 134 " hollow-ware cast 30% 146 " horse shoes and mule shoes. ... 25 % III " joists 35% 108 " kentledge 22>|^ 154 " locomotive tires 35% 109 " loops or other forms » 25% 133 " malleable castings of. 25% 124 " mill cranks, wrought 25% 121 " nail rods 30% 143 " nails 25% 146 " nuts 25% 57 F. B. Vandbgrift & Co. P«r. Article. Rate. 517 Iron ore, manganiferons free 115 " steel flat rails punched 25% 142 " articles enamelled ssf" 108 " pig» 22^% 131 " pipe, cast 25^ III " posts or sections of. 35% 132 " plates 25% 115 '* railway tires 25% 150 " " fish-plates 25^ 673 " " ties, wood free 151 " rivets 3°% no " rods 30% " " round in coils or in rolls 30^ 123 " rust or discoloration, no allowances for 108 " scrap 22>^^ 114 " scroll 30^ 116 " or steel sheets of, common or black including tagger 35% " " or steel common or black tag- gers sheets 9-ioc. per lb. " " or steel common or black tag- gers sheets, cold rolled, smoothed and not polished 9-10C per lb. 117 " or steel sheets or plates, es;- cept tin plates, terne plates, and taggers tin, galvanized or coated with metal or alloy 35^ 118 " or steel sheets, polished, plan- ished or glanced 35% 119 " or steel known as tin plates, terne plates or taggers tin, after October ist., 1894 i 1-5C per lb. *Provided that no article wholly or partly manufactured from tin or terne plate or iron or steel plate or sheet iron that pay a lower ratio of duty that that imposed upon tin, iron, or steel of which it is made. 109 " sizes or shapes of any kind a. o.p.f. 25% liiz " skelp 30^ 109 " slabs 25% 146 " spikes 25% 108 " spiegeleisen 22}i% 115 " splice-bars 25^ no " square 30% 117 " strips 35% III " structural shapes 35% 453 " sulphate of. free 115 " Trails 25% III " T T columns and posts 35% 147 " tacks 25% 116 " taggers 35% 127 " track tools 25^ 146 " washers 25/0 127 " wedges 25% 154 " wheels and parts of. 35^ 122 " wire, cloths 35% 145 " " nails 25% 122 " " nettings, rope and strand 35% 108 " wrought and cast scrap 22^% 124 " for ships and mill cranks and mill irons 25% 17 Isinglass, or fish glue 25% 496 Istle or Tampico fiber free 518 Ivory, sawed free 315 " buttons 25% 318 " bagetelle balls and billiard balls 50% Par. Article. Rate. 218 Ivory chess men, dice and draughts 5°^ 519 Jalap •."•■ f"^ 42 Japan varnish 25% 339 Japanned calf-skins and leather 20^ 567 Jasmine oil f""^ 216 Jellies 30^ 520 Jet free 349 " manufactures of. 25^ 334 Jewelry 35 fo 465 Jewels for watches free 521 Joss-stick or light free 567 Juglandium oil free 24s Juice, cherry, fruit, prune if 18% ofalchol, per gal. .50 if over 18% of alcohol per gal $1 80 532 Juice lemon lime and sour orange. ..free 567 Juniper oil free 522 Junk, old free 496 Jute free 269 " bagging 15^ 268 " bags for grain 20% " " burlaps not exceeding 60 inches in width nor 40 threads to square inch 15 fo 496 " butts free 274 " edging, embroideries and in- ssrtings 4°% 269 " gunny cloth 15% 274 " hem-stitched handkerchiefs. ...40% 274 " lace window curtains and laces40% 275 " manufactures of n. o. p. f. 30% 265 " yarn 20% 525 Kainite .' free 339 Kangaroo skins, dressed and fin- ished 20% 80 Kaolin per ton $2. 523 Kelp free 108 Kentledge iron 22)4 fo 490 Kernels, palm-nut free 341 Kid Gloves made wholly or in part of leather, wholly or partly manufactured, pay duty as fol- lows ; the length stated being the extreme length when stretched: 342 Kid Gloves, Ladies and Children glace finish, Schmaschen (of sheep origin) not over 14 inches in length, per dozen pairs Ii.oo Over 14 and not over 17 inches, per dozen pairs $i.50' Over 17 inches, per dozen pairs $2 00 342 Kid Gloves, Men's glace finish, Schmaschen (sheep) per dozen pairs I2.00 343 Kid Gloves, Ladies or Childrens, glace finish, lamb or sheep Not over 14 inches in length per dozen pairs $1 -75 Over 14 and not over 17 inches per dozen pairs $2.75 Over 17 inches per dozen pairs $3.75 343 Kid Gloves, Men's glace finish, lamb or sheep, per dozen pairs $3.00 344 Kid Gloves, Ladies' or children's glace finish, goat, kid or other leather than of sheep origin Not over 14 inches in length per dozen pairs $2.25 58 F. B. Vandbgrift & Co. Par. Article. Rate. Par. Article. Over 14 and not over 17 inches per dozen pairs {3.00 Over 17 inches per dozen pairs $4.00 344 Kid Gloves, Men's glace finish, kid, goat or other leather than of sheep origin per doien pairs... $300. 345 Kid Gloves, Ladies' and Children's of sheep origin with exterior grain surface removed, under any name Not over 14 inches in length per dozen pairs I1.75 Over 14 and not over 17 inches, per dozen pairs $2-75 Over 17 inches per dozen pairs $3.75 345 Kid Gloves, Men's of sheep origin, •with exterior surface removed, under any name fe.oo 346 Kid Gloves, Ladies or Childrens Kid, goat or other leather than of sheep origin, with exterior surface removed Not over 14 inches in length per dozen '. I2.25 Over 14 and not over 17 inches, per dozen I3.00 Over 17 inches per dozen $4.00 346 Kid Gloves, Men's Kid, goat or other leather than of sheep ori- gin with exterior surface removed per dozen $.300 347 Kid Gloves, when lined, pay, in addition to above rates per dozen .60 348 Kid Gloves, Tranks, with or with- out usual accompanying pieces shall pay 75 per centum of the duty provided for the gloves in theifabrication of which they are suitable for use 339 Kid skins, dressed 20% 524 Kieserite free 238 Kirschwasser per gal $1.80 Knit fabrics, (see wool.) 148 Knitting machine needles 25% 138 Knives and forks 35^ 138 " " " artists', butchers' fruit, kitchen, table 35% 136 " pen and pocket 45% 525 Kyanite free Sec. s Labeling and branding 526 Lac dye, button, crude, sesd and shell free 527 " spirits free 642 " sulphur free 274 Lace window curtains, except silk... 40% " Laces, except silk and wool 40% 415 " straw, for milliners' use free 299 " silk 50% 284 " wool 40% 528 Lactarine free 654 Lahn free 46 Lakes 25% 339 Lamb skins 20% 528 Lame free 38 Lamp-black 20% 399 Land and water fowls free 685 Lancewood free 529 Lard free 679 Last-blocks free 680 Laths free 33 Laudanum 25^ 84 Lava tips 35% 530 Lava unmanufactured free 567 Lavender oil free 47 Lead, acetate of. per lb. 2)^c. 175 " articles of n. o. p. f. 35% 164 " bars per lb. .01 163 " Dross 15% 164 " molten per lb. .or 165 " glazier' per lb. i^c 48 " nitrateof. perlb. i>^c. 164 " old refuse per lb. 01 163 " ore 15% 164 " pigs per lb. 01 165 " pipes perlb. oiX 49 " red per lb. 015 164 " scrap per lb. 01 165 " sheets per lb. oiX 165 Leadshot, per lb, .oiX 169 " type metal IS% 50 " white and white paint 015 165 " wire perlb, .oiX 158 Leaf, aluminum 30^ 158 " bronze, and Dutch metal 30^ 161 " gold 35% 162 " silver 35^ 183 Leaf tobacco, see tobacco 351 Xeather manufacture of, n.o.p.f.....30^ 338 " bend or belting lofa 339 " book-binders' calf skins 20^ " " boots and shoes 20% " " chamois 20% " " dressed upper 20^ " gloves, see kid gloves 339 " enameled 2°% 339 " japanned 3°^ 340 " otherforms 20% 339 " piano forte 20^ patent 20^ 340 " shoe uppers or vamps 20% 339 " shoes and boots 20^ 337 " sole 5fo 531 Leeches ^"^"^ 72 Lee'» crystals 25^ 554 Lemonade and soda water ......free 567 Lemon grass oil free 532 " juice free 567 " oil free 570 " peel free 218 " preserved 3°^ 214 Lemons in packages, per cubic ft 08 " " in bulk per 1,000, $1.50 " " packages containing 30^ 98 Lenses, glass or pebble 35% 410 Library of Congress, articles for, free 468. Lichens free 21 Licorice, extracts of. per lb, .05 " " rolls and paste per lb, .05 533 " root, unground free 534 Life-saving apparatus for societies....free 685 Lignum-vitae free 572 Lily of the valley free 78 Lime 10% 413 " borate of. ....-free 536 " chlorideof. free 532 " juice free 588 " sulphate of, unground free 104 Limestone • 20^ 214 Limes in packages per cubic ft, .oS 271 Linoleum 3°% 205 Linseed per bu, .20 27 " oil per gal, .15 57iLiquid orchil free 14 " coloring for liquors 5°% 59 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. Par. Article. Rate. 243 Liquid malt extract in bottles, pergal, .30 Linen, see flax 47 Litharge per lb,.i2^c 306 Lithographic charts and prints, 25^ 537 Lithograph stones not engraved free 538 Litmus free 188 Live animals, n. o. p. f. 20% 371 " " for breeding purposes..free ^39 Loadstones , free 154 Locomotive tires 35% 16 Logwood, extract of. 10% Looking glass plates. See Glass. ■676 Lumber, deals, etc free 191 Macaroni and vermicelli 25% -630 Mace free 567 " oil of. free 479 Mackerel, fresh r. free 208 " salted, or pickled, or smoked per lb, 3^c ^40 Madder, extracts of free 22 Magnesia, calcined per lb, .07 " " carbonate of and medi- cinal per lb, .03 541 " sulphate of. free 542 Magnesite free 543 Magnesium free 544 Magnets free 685 Mahogany-wood free ■685 Malacca joints, India free 133 Malleable iron castings 25% 244 Malt, extract of, condensed 30% " " in casks, per gal 15 " " in bottles or jugs. per doz, .30 545 Manganese, ore of. free " " oxide of. free •611 Mangel wurzel seed free 496 Manilla free 546 Manna free 317 Manufactured corks 20% 103 Manufactures of alabaster 30% 175 " " aluminum 35^?, 349 " " amber and asbestus 25 5?i 352 " " b2ad trimmings and ornaments 35% 349 Manufactures of bladders 25% 350 " "bone 25% 349 " "catgut 25% 350 " " chip 25% 175 " " copper :...35/^ 349 " " coral 45% 262 " "cotton 35% 258 " "chenille 40% 326 " " down and feathers..35 % 275 " " flax or hemp 30% ,351 " " fur 30^ 352 " " gelatine 35% 100 " "glass 35% 17s " " gold 35% 350 " "grass 25% 351 " " gutta-percha 30% 275 " " flax hemp andjute. 30% 351 " "hard rubber 30% 350 " " horn 25% 351 ■' " human hair 30j/n 350 " " India rubber 25% 351 " "indurated fiber wares 30% 175 Manufactures of iron and steel 35 y^ 352 " " ivory 355-, 349 " "jet 25% 334 " "jewelry 35% 275 " "jute 20% Par. Article. Rate. 175 Manufactures of lead 35^ 351 " "leather 30^ 103 " " marble 30% 175 " " metals 35% 352 " " mother-of-pearl 35^ 175 " " nickel 35% 103 " " onyx, 30% 177 " " osier 25^ 350 " " palm-leaf. 25^ 311 " " paper 20% 351 " " papiermache 30% 349 " " paste 25^ 175 " " pewter 35% 351 " " plaster of Paris 30% 175 " " platinum 35^ 351 " "pulp 30% 352 " "shell 35fo 300 " "silk 45% 175 " "silver 35% 106 " "slate 20% 349 " "spar 25% 350 •' "straw 25% 175 " " tin 35% 185 " "tobacco 40c per lb. 275 " " vegetable fiber 30^ 352 " " " ivory 35% 351 " "vulcanized India rubber 30^ 349 Manufactures of wax 25% 35° " "weeds 25% " " " whalebone 25% 349 " "whip-gut 25% 177 " "willow 25% 176 " "wood 25% 279 " " wool 40% 349 " " worm-gut 25% 175 " "zinc 35% 499 Manure, substances, used for free 499 Manures free 547 Manuscripts free 309 Maps and charts 25% loi Marble, block, rough or squared per cubic ft. .40 103 " manufactures of 30% " " paving tiles. ..per cubic ft. .75 slabs " " .75 575 " statuary free 102 " veined, sawed, dressed or otherwise per cubic ft. .75 319 Marbles, toy 25% Sec. 5 Marking, stamping, etc. 548 Marrow, crude free 549 Marshmallows free 353 Masks composed of paper, 25% 324 Matches 20% Sec. 22 Materials, imported, draw- back on 354 Matting, cocoa fiber or rattan 20^ 483 " Chinese free " " floor .....free 354 Mats 20% 223 Meat, extract of 2o$?> 390 Meats, prepared, etc free 550 Medals, copper free gold free " " silver free' " " suchas trophies or prizes.. ..free 361 Medicinal acids free 56 " preparations, alcoholic ,, perlb, .50 not otherwise provided for 25 % 60 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. I'ar. Article. Rate. ^52 Meerschaum, crude free -641 Melada, concentrated free Sec. 20 Merchandise from sunken vessels. 57 Mercurial medicinal preparations.. .25% 157 Metal, Dutch, in leaf. 10% 159 " sheathing or yellow 20% 160 " thread 25% ■S62 " type, old fiee 159 " yellow 20% 175 Metals, articles of n. o. p. f. 35% 551 " unwrought free 551 Metallic mineral substances, crude, free 166 " pens 35% 168 " pins 20^ 551 Mica free 124 Mill cranks, wrought iron 25% 638 " stones free 124 " irons, wrought 25^ 553 Milk, fresh free 195 " preserved or condensed 20^ " " sugar of 20% 49 Mineral, orange per lb, i^cts 555 " substances, metallic, crude free 247 " waters, artificial 30% 554 " " natural free 668 " wax free 555 Minerals, crude free 100 Mirrors, hand 35^ pocket 35% " table 35% 556 Models of invention free 641 Molasses free " " concentrated and concrete, free 497 Molds, gold-beaters free 164 Molten lead per lb, .01 104 Monumental stone 20% 339 Morocco, skins for 10^ 23 Morphia per oz, .50 " " salts of " .50 " Morphine " .50 557 Moss, crude .^ free 468 Mosses, drugs free 580 Mother-of pearl, unmanufactured... free 188 Mules 20% 686 Mungo, woollen free 369 Muriate of ammonia free 595 " potash free 197 Mushrooms, prepared, etc 30% 558 Musk, crude free 140 Muskets 25% 232 Mustard per lb, .10 611 " seed free 390 Mutton free 559 Myrobolan free 685 Myrtle wood free 121 Nail-rods, iron or steel 30% 143 Nails, cut " 25% J44 " hob 15% " " horseshoe.... 25% 145 " wire 25% " " wrought iron or steel 2%5 625 Naftrai history, specimens of. free 554 •' mineral waters free Sec. 17 Neat cattle, importation of. Sec. 17 " hidesof. 148 Needles n. o. p. f. 25^' 148 560 560 148 148 148 crochet 25% darning free hand-sewing free knitting 25^ knitting machine 25% sewing machine 25 % 61 Par. Article. Rate. 148 Needles' tape 25% 567 Neroli oil free 270 Nets, flax 30^ 273 " head, flax 35% 561 Newspapers and periodicals tree 562 Nickel frae 562 " alloy free 175 " article of 35% 573 " matte free 573 " ore free 562 " oxide free 622 Niter-cake free 622 48 595 54 nitrate 622 222 490 490 220 563 564 679 cubic free of lead per lb, i}4 cts " potash, ciude free " potash, refined, per lb, >^ct. " soda free 15 Nitrous ether, spirits of per lb, |i.oo 686 Noils, wool free 587 Nursery stock free 468 Nutgalls i free 63 1 Nutmegs free 567 Nut oil free 219 Nuts, almonds, shelled per lb, .05 " " " not shelled. ..per lb, .03 " all kinds, n. o. p. f. per lb, .01 " Brazil, cocoa, cream free " not edible free " filberts, shelled per lb, .04 " " not shelled per lb, .02 " pea or grouad, shelled, per lb, oi}4 " " " not shelled. ...01 ' ' palm free " walnuts, shelled....^ per lb, .04 " " not shelled 02 Nuxvomica free Oakum free Oar blocks free 189 Oats 20% " Oatmeal, 20% 56s Ocher free 40 Ochery earths, ground in oil, perlb.i^c. 567 Oil, almond, amber, ambergris, ani- line, anise, anise-seed, aniline, aspic, bene, bergamot, cajeputfree cake free caraway, cassia, chamomile, ce- drat, cinnamon, citronella, civet, cocoanut, fennel, jasmine, juglandium, juniper, lavender, lemon, lemon grass, liiaes,mace, neroli, nut, orange flower, origanum, rose, rosemary, sesame, spike lavender, thyme free castor 35c per gal. cod-liver 25% distilled 25% essential 25^ expressed 25% rendered 25% flax-seed 15 per gal. fusel 10 fo hemp-seed..... 10 per gal. linseed 15 per gal- olive 35 per gal. peppermint 25^ poppy-seed 15 per gal. rape-seed 10 per gal. soluble 30% spermaceti free seal 25% herring 25% 566 567 25 26 58 27 28 29 27 30 31 27 29 24 567 32 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. Par. Article. Rate. 28 Oil fusel mfo 205 " seeds 2operbii. 24 " turkey red 30% 567 " product of American fisheries.... free 567 " valerian free 361 " vitrol free 32 " whale 25^ 577 Old paper free 24 Oleate of soda 30% 193 Oleomargarine 04 per lb. 30 Olive oil 35 per gal. 568 Olives free 201 Onions 20 per bu. 33 Opium, aqueous extract of 25% 569 " crude free 33 " liquid preparation 25% 34 " other preparations of ..f 6 per lb. 33 " tincture of 25% 96 Optical instruments 35% 532 Orange juice, sour free 49 " mineral i|^c. perlb. 567 "' oil free 570 " peel free 218 " " preserved 30% 685 " wood free 214 Oranges in packages 08 per cu. ft. " " bulk jSi. 50 per 1,000 " " boxes and barrels 30% 572 Orchids free 571 Orchil liquid free 374 Ore, antimony free 436 " chromic free 442 " cobalt free 449 " copper free 470 " emery free 573 " gold free 517 " iron free 163 " lead 15% 545 " of manganese free 517 " manganiferous free 573 " nickel and nickel matte free 573 " silver free 163 " silver containing lead, duty on lead 15% 517 " sulphur free 653 " tin free 163 Ores containing lead, duty on lead. .15% 296 Organzine silk 20% 326 Ornamental feathers 25% 380 Orpiment free 177 Osier, articles of 25% " " prepared 20% 574 Osmium free 567 Ottar of roses free 283 Outside garments, wool 45% 58 Oxide of cobalt 25% 545 " manganese free 562 " nickel free 653 " tin, black free 640 " strontia free 663 " uranium free 45 " zinc 20% 214 Packages containing lemons and limes 30% 178 Packing boxes and shocks 20% 138 Painters' knives 35% 575 Paintings in oil or water colors free 46 Paints, artists' n.o.p.f. 25% 45 " white zinc 20% " (see Colors) 576 Palladium free 138 Pallette knives 35% 681 Palings, wood free Article. Rate 472 Palm-leaf fans free 490 " nuts and palm-nut kernels free 567 " oil iree 472 Palms free 305 Paper-albnmenized 25% 306 " albums 25% 309 " books, printed and blank 25% 305 " copying books 25% 306 " card-boards 25% 307 " envelopes 20% 308 " for fire boards, screens and hangings 20% " drawing 20% 305 " filtering 25% 303 " printing, unsized 12% 304 " " sized 15% 302 " sheathing 10% 305 " silver 25% 306 " surface-coated 25% 305 " tissue 25% 308 " writing 20% 311 " manufactures of, n.o.p.f. 20% 577 " old for papermakers free 316 " or pulp of buttons 25% 577 " stock, crude free 577 " woods for paper makers free 308 Papier mache 20% 578 Parraffine free 359 Parasol sticks 30% 358 Parasols covered with silk 45 % " " " " wool or goat- hair 45% 358 Parasols, covered with paper 35% 306 Parchment 25% Parian ware, see china 44 Paris white 25% 685 Patridge sticks free 336 Paste jewelry 10% 414 " Brazil free 59 Paste for toilet use 40% 513 " ofindigo free 7 Patent alum 20% 339 " leather". 20% 71 " tartar 25% 673 Paving posts, wood free 102 " tiles, marble, per cubic ft 75c. 221 Peanuts or ground beans, not shelled per lb, QIC. " " or ground beans, shelled per lb, i^c. 314 Pearl buttons, per line 01 and 15% 580 " mother of, unmanufactured. ..free 352 " " " manufactured 35% 335 Pearls 15% 336 " set and strung 25% 202 Peas in papers per lb, .01 " " dried per bu, 20 581 " green in bulk or packages free 197 " prepared, etc 30% 202 " split per bu, .50 98 Pebbles, Brazilian 35%. 218 Peel, Lemon and Orange 30% 582 Peltries of Indians free 356 Pencil leads 10% 355 Pencils, lead 35% " " slate 25% 312 " hair 30% 167 Pen-holders and parts of. 25 % 136 Pen-knives and parts of. 45% 167 Pens, gold 25% 166 " metal 35% 632 Pepper, white and black free 233 " cayenne perlb, 2^c 62 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. Par. Article. Rate. 31 Peppermint oil 25% 325 Percussion caps ^. 30% 6 Perfumery, alcoholic per gal, $2.00 and 25% 561 Periodical!, -weekly, monthly or quarterly , free 583 Personal effects of passengers, do- mestic free 669 Personal effects of passengers, for- eign free over $250, dutiable 584 Pewter, old free 175 " articles of. 35% 688 Philosophical apparatus for socie ties free 586 Phosphates, crude free 51 Phosphorus 25^ 306 Photographic albums .". 25% 688 Photographs for exhibition free 309 Photographs 25% 339 Piano forte action, leather 20% 681 Pickets, wood free 197 Pickles 30% 164 Pig lead per lb, .01 108 " iron 22>^^ 653 " tin free 257 Pile fabrics, cotton, not bleached, colored, stained or dyed 35^ " Pile fabrics, if bleached 40% " Pile fabrics, plain 35^ 633 Pimento, unground free 685 " sticks free 677 Pine clapboards free 168 Pins, belt, bonnet, shawl and hat. ..20% " " hair, safety, solid head, etc 20% 357 Pipes, common clay per gross, .10 " " tobacco, briarwood and meer- schaum 50% 128 " and tubes, boiler 25% 131 " cast iron or steel 25% 159 " copper 20% 165 " lead perlb, i^c 141 Pistols 30% 422 Pitch, Burgundy free 647 " of coal tar free 647 " ofwood free 82 Plaques, plain 35% 83 " ornamented 40% 415 Plaits, braids, laces and similar mfs., composed of straw, chip, grass, palm-leaf, willow, osier, or rattan, suitable for making or ornamenting hats, bonnets and hoods free 673 Planking for ships free 587 Plants, fruit free 648 " tea free 591 Planters and reapers, agricultural.... free 79 Plaster of Paris, or gypsum, calcined. 15% " " " " " " ground. ..10% 588 " " " " " unground. free 585 " " " " " casts of, for societies, etc .....free Plateglass, (see glass) 149 Plates, copper and steel, engraved. .25^ " " 'engraved'or lithographed 25^ " " stereotype 25^ 474 " fashion free 150 " railway fish 25^ 589 Platina free 590 Platinum, articles of, for chemical use free • " Platinum unmanufact'd free Par. Article. Rate. 310 Playing cards in packs of not over 54 cards per pack loc. and 50% 591 Ploughs, reapers and planters free 592 Plumbago free 138 Plumbers' knives 35^, 212 Plums 20% 593 Plush, Hatter's Black free 257 Plushes, cotton, plain 35^ " " " colored, etc 40^ 297 " silk 45^ " wool, (see "Woolens") 136 Pocket-knives and parts of. 45^ 100 Pocket mirrors 35^ 673 Poles hop free 672 " telegraph free 594 Polishing and burnishing stones free 59 Pomades for toilet use 40% 318 Pool and billiard balls 50% 685 Poplar wood free 205 Poppy seed per bu, 20c. 27 " oil... per gal, 150. 82 Porcelain glass ware, plain 35^ 390 Pork free 679 Posts, fence free 52 Potash bi-chromate of. 20% 52 " chromate of 20^ " caustic, refined free " hydrate of, refined free " nitrate of, crude free " " " refined per lb, }4c. " chlorate, sulphate and muri- ate of free " iodate, iodide and hydrio- date of perlb, 25c. " prussiate of 20% Pototoes per bu, loc. 357 Pouches for smokers' use 50^ 224 Poultry, dead, not dressed,... per lb, 2c. " " dressed perlb, 3c. 536 Powder, bleaching or chloride of lime free " bronze 30^ " curry free " gun, valued at over 20c. per lb per lb, 8c. " gun, valued at not over 20C. perlb perlb, 5c. " face and toilet 40% " fulminating, n.o.p.f. 30% " ink 20^ 336 Precious stones, unset 15% " ifset 25% " " " imitations of 10% 57 Preparations, of calomel 25% 441 " of coal tar free 56 " medicinal, alcoholic. .50 per lb. " " " n. o. p. f...25% 59 " toilet 40^ 19 Printers' ink 20% 309 Printed matter, n. o. p. f. 25^ 303 Printing paper, unsized, suitable only for books and mewspapers..i2^ 304 Printing paper, sized, suitable only for books and newspapers 15% 306 Prints, lithographic 25^ 596 Professional books, implements, etc free 56 Proprietary preparations, medici- nal (alcoholic) 50% 640 Protoxide of strontian free 245 Prune wine, not over 18% alcohol .50 per gal. 595 54 595 53 55 203 158 461 323 59 322 19 63 F. B Vandegrift & Co. Par. Article. Rate. 245 Prune wine over 18 Cf alcohol |i.8o per gal. 212 Prunes 20% 36 Prussian blue 06 per lb. 55 Prussiate of potash, red and yellow..20^ 689 Public monuments, articles for free 316 Pulp, buttons of 25^ 311 " paper manufactures of 20% 353 " masks, made of 25% 301 " wood mechanically ground or chemical 10% 597 Pulu free 598 Pumice and pumice stone free 44 Putty, whiting or raw white ground in oil 25% 517 Pyrites and burnt residuum from ... free I Pyroligneous acid 20^ 13 Pyroxyline, compounds of. 40 per lb. 13 " articles made of 45% 13 " rolled sheets of 50% 599 Quicksilver free 43 " colors containing... 06 per lb. 600 Quills, prepared or unprepared but not mfd free 326 Quilts of down 35% 601 Quinia, sulphate of free 392 " barks yielding free 460 Quoits, or curling stones free 602 Rags free 686 " woolen free IIS Railway bars, iron or steel 25% 150 " fish-plates 25% 154 " tires, iron or steel 25% 673 Railroad ties free 673 " cedar free 115 Rails, flat, iron or steel 25% 115 " ironorsteel 25% 215 Raisinsiandotherdried grapesi^c per lb. 611 Rape-seed free 29 " oil lopergal. 139 Rasps 35% 238 Ratafia $1.80 per gal. 415 Rattan, for hats, bonnets and hoods free 354 " matting 20% 354 " mats 20% 685 " unmanufactured free 136 Razor blades 45% 136 Razors ....45% 591 Reapers free 233 Red pepper, unground 2^c. per lb. 49 Red lead i>ic. per lb. 24 Red oil, Turkey 30% 684 Reeds, wrought or manufactured .... free 684 " chair, wrought or manufac- tured free 181 Refined sugars, all above No. 16, D. S. in color 5-20C. per lb. 164 Refuse lead 01 per lb. 603 Regalia, gems, etc free 374 Regulns of antimony free 451 " of copper free 58 Rendered oil 25% 604 Rennets free 517 Residuum from burnt pyrites free 46S Resins, gum, medicinal free 590 Retorts, platinum free 192 Rice, broken, which will pass through No. 12 wire sieve X c. per lb. 192 " cleaned i>^c. perlb. 64 Par. Article. Rate. 192 Rice flour ^c per Ib- " free of outer hull, and having outer cuticle on 01 per lb. 192 " meal ^c- P^r lb. 192 " uncleaned 01 per Ib- 192 " paddy ^c. per Ib.- 140 Rifles, sporting 25% 686 Ring-waste free 121 Rivet wire rods, iron 30% 121 " " steel 30% 151 Rivets 30% 73 Rochelle salts 10% 373 Rocoa or Orleans free 373 " extracts of. free 107 Roofing slates jofo 302 " felt lofe 379 Root, arrow, raw, etc free 468 " briar free 433 " chicory free 433 " chicory, raw free 464 " dandelion free 629 " ginger free 533 " licorice, unground fre& 611 Roots, bulbous free 611 " hop, for cultivation free 266 Rope, hemp 10^ 122 " iron-wire 35% 567 Rosemary oil Iree 567 Roses, ottar of free 685 Rosewood fre& 598 Rotten stone free 373 Roucou, and extracts of free no Round iron in coils cr rods 30% 686 Roving waste free 282 Rubber clothing, wool 45% 351 Rubber, hard 30^ 512 " India, milk of free 512 " crude free 336 Rubies, cut but not set 15% 274 Ruchings 40% 274 RufHings 40% 240 Rum, bay and bay water $1 per gaU 189 Rye flour 20^ 132 Sad irons 25% 168 Safety pins 20^ 605 Safilower free " " extractsof free " Saffron free " " cake free " extract of. free 606 Sago free " " crude free " " flour free 611 St. John's bread free 607 Salacine free 58 Sal-ammoniac 25% 65 Sal-soda per lb, yic 621 Saleratus per lb, }4c- 612 Saloup free 479 Salmon, fresh free 608 Salt free 622 " cake...y free 595 Saltpeter, crude free 54 " refined per lb, l^c 370 Salts, aniline free 595 " black free 58 " chemical 25^ 601 " of cinchona bark free 541 " Epsom free 23 '• of morphia per oz, 50c. 73 " Rochelle 10% 68 " of strychnia 30^ F. B. Vandegrift & Co. Par- Article. Rate. 663 Salts of uranium free 555 Sand, crude free 104 Sandstone 20% 60 Santonine perlb, fi.oo " " salts of. " " 207 Sardines 30^ 37 Satin, white 25% 685 " wood free 197 Sauces 30^ 609 Sauer krout free 404 Sausage, Bologoa free 610 " skins free 152 Saw plates, circular, steel 25% " Saws " back " circular " cross-cut " drag " hand " mill " pit " 286 Saxony carpets 35^ 688 Scientific apparatus for societies and institutions free 306 Scrap albums 25^, 512 " India rubber, old free ipS " iron iiyifo 164 " lead per lb, ic. 108 " steel i^Ytfo 308 Screens, paper for 20% 121 Screw wire, iron or steel 30% 153 " wood " 117 ScroU iron and steel 35% 575 Sculpture, specimens of free 557 Sea weeds free 32 Seal oil 25% 611 Seed-cane free 634 Seeds, (agricultural, n. o. p. f. free 611 " anise free 634 " all others free 468 " aromatic free 611 " bene free 611 " canary free 611 " caraway free 611 " cardamon free 468 " castor free 611 " coriander free 611 " cotton free 6n " croton free 611 " cummin free 611 " fennel free 611 " fenugreek free 205 " flax per bushel, 20 c. 6n " flower ^ free 634 " garden free 6ri " grass, free 611 " hemp free 611 " hoarhound free 205 " lin per bushel, 20 c. 611 " mangel-wurzel free 611 " mustard free 205 " oil per bushel, 20 c. 205 " poppy ., per bushel, 20 c. 6ii " rape free 611 " St. John's bread free 611 " sorghum for free 611 " sugar-cane for free 611 " sugar beet free 27Q Seins, flax 30% 612 Selep free 305 Sensitized paper ,.... 25% 5$7 Sesame, or sesamum-seed oil free Article. Rate. 148 Sewing machine needles 25% 439 Shale coal free 168 Shawl pins 20% 283 Shawls, woolen 45% 157 Sheathing, old yellow metal, fit only for lemanufaclure 10% 159 Sheathing, or yellow metal, com- posed in part of copper 20% 477 Sheathing, felt, adhesive free 302 " paper 10% 188 Sheep 20% 339 " skins, dressed and finished ...20% 159 Sheets copper 20% 165 " leaa perlb, iXc. 120 " iron and steel in s rips 25% 173 " zinc 25% 352 Shell, manufactures of 35% 613 " unmanufactvired free 314 " buttons I c. per line and 15 J^ 615 Shell-fish, fresh free 211 Shell-fish, cans or paciiages contain- ing 8 c. and 12 c. p;r doz. 613 Shells, not manufactured free 679 Shingle-bolts free 682 Shingles, white pine free 682 " all other free 170 Ship chronometers 10% 673 " planking free 673 " timber free 273 Shirts, linen 35'% 276 Shoddy 15% 316 Shoe buttons 25% 316 " " board 25% 316 " " paper 25% 316 " " papier mache 25% 316 " " pulp 25% 261 Shoe lacing, cotton 35% 146 Shoes, horse and ox 25% 339 " leather 2o<^ 339 " uppers, leather 20% 385 Shocks, domestic free 178 " packing box 20^ 178 " sugar box 20^ 140, 141 Shot gun barrels 25 and 30% 140, 141 Shotguns 25 and 30% 165 Shot, lead iX c. per lb. 615 Shrimps free 587 Shrubs free 137 Side arms 35% 40 Sienna \yi c. perlb. 40 " earths i^ c. per lb. 66 Silicate, alkaline %. c. per lb. 66 " of soda X c- per lb. 298 Silk beltings 40% 298 " bindings 40^ 298 " braces 40^ 298 " braids 40% 313 " button forms 10% 298 " buttons 40% 296 " carded or combed 25 c. per lb. 299 " clothing, ready made 50% 297 " chestiUes 45% 617 " cocoons free 298 " cords, tassels 40% 299 " embroideries 50% 296 " floss 20% 298 " fringes 40% 298 " gallons 40% 298 " gorings 40% 299 " handkerchiefs 50% 593 " hatters' plush free 299 " knit goods ....50% 65 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. Par. Article. Rate. 299 Silk laces 50^ 200 " manufactures of 45% 299 " neck rufflings 50% 296 " organzine 20% 298 " ornaments 40% 297 " pile fabrics ASfo 297 " plushes 45% 616 " raw free 299 " ready-made clothing 50% 200 " rubber clothing 45% 299 " ruchings 5°% 296 " sewing 20% 296 " singles 20% 296 " spunin skeins 20% 298 " suspenders 4°% 296 " threads 20^ 296 " thrown 20% 296 " tram 20% 296 " twist 20% 297 " velvets 45% 617 " waste free 299 " wearing apparel 50% 298 " webbings 40% 618 " worm'seggs free 296 " yarns 20% 175 Silver, articles of. 35% 421 " bullion free 160 " bullions of 25% 447 " coins free 156 " German 15% 162 " leaf. 35% 550 " medals as trophies free 572 " ore free 162 " " containing lead ; duty on lead 15% 305 Silver paper 25% 160 " thread 25% 644 " sweepings free 641 Syrup of cane juice free 496 Sisal grass free 266 " cables, cordage and twine 10% 42 Size, gold 25% 619 Skeletons free 112 Skelp iron 30^ 112 " steel 30% 504 Skins, Angora goat, raw free 504 " asses', raw free 298 " birds', prepared free 239 " bookbinders' calf, dressed and finished 20% 229 " calf, dressed and finished 20% 239 " chamois 20% 481 " fish, raw free 239 " goat, dressed and finished 20^ 239 " kangaroo, dressed and fin- ished 20% 239 " kid, dtessed and finished 20% 229 " lamb, dressed and finished ...20% 239 " for morocco 10% 497 " gold beaters' free 492 " fur, not dressed free 610 " sausage free 239 " sheep, dressed and finished....2o% 686 " wools on free 439 Slack coal free 106 Slate, chimney pieces 20% 106 " mantels 20% 106 " manufacture of 20% 355 " pencils 25% 106 " slabs for tables 25% 106 Slates 20% 107 " roofing ..10% 66 Par. Article. Rate. 127 Sledges, blacksmiths 25% 276 Slubbing waste 15% 46 Smalts 25% Sec. 21 Smelting in bonded warehouses. 357 Smokers' articles 5°^ 620 Snails free 186 Snuff 40c. per lb. 186 " flour 40c. per lb. 61 Soaps, castile 20% 61 " fancy 35% 61 " other 10% 61 " perfumed 35% 61 " toilet 35% 72 Soda and potassa, tartrate of. 10% 65 " ash Xc-perlb. 62 " bicarbonate of ^c. per lb. 64 " bichromate of 20% 413 " borate of free 63 " caustic >^c. perlb. 621 " chlorate of. free 64 " chromate of 20% 65 " chrystals "/^c. per lb. 63 " hydrate of j^c. per lb. 621 " nitrate of. free 24 " elate of 30% 65 " sal >^c. perlb. 66 " silicate of. •, X^- per lb. 622 " sulphate of free 62 " supercarbonate of. )4c. per lb. 554 " water free 623 Sodium free 24 Soluble oil 30% 611 Sorghum for seed free 641 " sugar from free 532 Sour orange juice free 349 Spar, manufactured 25^ 624 Sparterre free 625 Specimens of natural history free 575 " sculpture free 96 Spectacles 35% 96 " frames 35% 98 " glass plates for 35% .98 " lenses 35% 567 Spermaceti oil free 233 Spices 03 per lb. 626 " cassia free 626 " cassia vera and buds free 627 " cinnamon and chips free 628 " clove stems free 628 " cloves free 629 " ginger root, unground free 630 " mace free 631 " nutmegs free 632 " pepper, black and white free 633 " pimento free 517 Spiegelsisen free 567 Spike lavender oil free 143 Spikes, cut 25% 144 " wrought 25% 238 Spirits $1.80 per gal. 527 " lac free 15 ' ' nitrous ether 20c. per lb. 660 " turpentine free 238 Spirituous beverages fi.8o per gal. 67 Sponges 10% Spool thread, cotton (see cotton). 140 Sporting rifles 25% 678 Spruce clapboards free 635 Spunk free 296 Spun silk 20% 636 Spurs for crockery free Sec. 5, stamping and branding. F. B. Vandejgrift & Co. Article. Rate. 230 Starch 01 per lb. 231 ■' burnt 01 per lb. 575 Stattiary free 5?5 Statues , free 673 Stave-bolts free 683 Staves of wood free 128 Stays boiler 25% 120 Steel, aUoysiused for steel tools 25% 124 " anchors 25?^ Ill " angles 35^ anvils 25% 126 125 125 125 125 114 175 120 111 120 127 127 117 120 112 axles ■•257" axle bars. 25% axle blanks 25% axle forgings.. 25^ band 30% barrel hoops 35^ bars :....; 25^ beams 35^ billets and bars 25% blacksmiths' hammers 25^ blacksmiths' sledges 25% black taggers 35% blooms , , 25^ boiler arid other plate, except saw plate, not thinner than No. 10, wire gauge sheared or un- sheared 30% 128 " boiler tubes, pipes, etc 25% 129 " bolt blanks 25% bolts. 129 " III " 154 " III " 120 " 135 " III " 120 " 120 " 120 " 120 " 127 " 120 " 120 " 115 " 113 " 125 " III " 120 " 120 " 129 " 129 " 114 " 146 " 120 " _ 120 " in all forms, n. o. p. f. 25^ III " joists 35% 154 " locomotive tires 35% 175 " manufacture of. 35% 146 " mule shoes 25% 145"' " nails...... 25% 146 ~_ " ox shoes 25% 111 " parts or sections of columns and posts 35% 120 " piston-rods 25% " plate'. 112 . "■ boiler or other, except saw plates, not thinner than No. 10, sheared or' unsheared.. 30^ 117' '■' steel, all, except tin, terne arid taggers, galvanized or ' coated 35% 2570 building forms 35% car-tires ........' 25% car-truck channels 35% castings 25% chains '. 30% channels 35 ^ circular saw plates..., 25% connecting-rods 25% crank-shafts 25% crank-pins ....25% crowbars 25% deck and bulb beams 25% die-blocks or blanks 25% flat rails ! 25^ forgings 30% forgings for axles 25^ girders 35% gun barrel molds 25% hammer molds 25% hinge-blanks 25%, hinges 25% hoop 30% horseshoes 25^ ingots, cogged 25^ P^r. Article. Rate. 119 Steel coated with tin or lead, and known as tin, or terne plate, and taggers tin, to take eflfect Oct. I, 1893 1 1-5 per lb. 120 " pressed, sheared or stamped shapes 25% 115 " rails, flat ...25^ 115 " railway bars 25% 150 " railway fish plates : 25% 120 " railway tires 25% 151 " rivets 30^ 121 " rods 30% izi " for rivets, screws, nails and fences 30^ 123 " rust or discoloration, no al- lowance 120 " saw plates 25^ 120 " saw plates, circular 25^ 208 " scrap ^.22j4fe 114 " scroll 30% 120 " shafting 25% I20 " shafts 25% 120 " sheets, n. o. p. f. 25% 112 " skelp 30% 120 " slabs 25% 146 " spikes 25% 150 " splice bars 25% 120 " steamer shafts 25% 122 " strips ssfo III " structural shapes 35^ 115 " Trails 25^ III " TT columns aud posts 35% 116 " taggers 35% 120 " tapered or beveled bars 25% 154 " tired wheels 35% 175 " waves 35% 146 " washers 25^ 127 " wedges 25% 154 " wheels 35% 154 " wheels, parts of 35% 130 " wire card clothing 30% 122 " wire cloths 35% 121 " wire, flat 30% 14s " wire nails 25% 122 " " nettings 35% " rope 35% 120 " wrist or crank pins 25% 138 Steels, table 35% 149 Stereotype plates 25% 685 Sticks of hair-wood free 685 " " myrtle wood free " " " orange wood free " " " other wood free " " " partridge wood free " " " pimento wood free 359 " for parasols 30% . " " " sunshades 30^ ;" " " umbrellas' 30% 179 " " walking, finished 25% 242 StiU wines!..., 50c. per gal, $1.60 per case etc. 636 Stills for crockery free 505 Stock, glue free 577 " paper free 638 Stone building, undressed free 104 " " dressed 20% 638 " cliff, undressed free 104 " " dressed 20% 638 " granite, undressed free 105 " grind $1.75 per ton 638 " lime free 104 " lime, dressed 20% 67 F. B, Vanbegrift &- Co." Article. 638 Stone moaumeutal free 104 638 104- (( 638 466 482 537 539 638 594 336 507 dressed 20; pumice; free rotten free sand free sand, dressed 20% statuary, e2:cepttaarble 2ofe burr free " rough free. curling. free flint free lithographic free load free miU free polishing free precious, uncut 15% set 25^ whet free - 382 Stops, art educational free 639 Storax free- 132. Stove-plates 25% 637 Straw free 640 Strontia, oxide of and protoxide of strontian free 640 Strontianite or mineral carbonate of strontia free 68 Strychnia or strychnine and all salts thereof. 639 Styrax or storax free 666 -Subacetate of copper, or Terdigris...free 223 Substances explosive, valued at not over 20C. per lb per lb, .05 ' ' Substances explosive, valued at over 20c. per lb per lb, .08 499 Substances used for manures free 557 " vegetable, crude n.o.p.f.-.free 641 Sugars not above No. 16 D. S... free 641 " drainings sweepings and tank bottoms free 641 " syrups of cane-juice melada, concentrated melada and mo- lasses free " " beet, not above No. 16, D. S..free 611 " beet seed and sugar cane free 178 " box shocks and packing box shooks 20^ 184 " candy and confectionary 30^ " " glucose or grape sugar 15 % " " after being refined when tinc- tured, colored or in uny way adulterated. 30^ 557 " cane free 182 " grape or glucose 15^ 181 " aU above No. 16 D. S. in color per lb, 5-20C. 195 " of mUk 2ofo i8t " refined,, not tinctured, col- ored or adulterated per lb, 5-20C. 7 Sulphate of alumina and aluminous cake 20% 369 Sulphate of amonia free 35 " " baryta^ m'f'd..per ton, I3.00 37- " " " artificial 25^ 403 " " copper or blue vitriol free 453 " " iron or copperas free 588 " "lime free 541 " " magnesia or epsomsalts..free 595 " " potasht crude or refined..free- 601 • " " quinia.' free 622 " " soda, or salt, cake or nitre cake free 380 Sulphide of arsenic free Par. ArtiblB. Rate. 374 Sulphide of antimony ore; crude free 643 Sulphuric aoid.i free 15 " ethers per lb, 356. 517 Sulphur ore, containing in excess of 25% of sulphur.. free 517 Sulphuret of iron, pyrites.' free 642 Sulphur, refined, lac or precipitated..free 64a " or brimstone, crude in bulk free 69 " resublimed and flowers of...free 16 Sumac, extract of. jofo 70 " ground lofd 496 Sunn, unm'f'd and undressed free 266 " cables, cordage and twine, m'f'dof. 10%' 358 Sunshades,, covered with silk, wool ' or goat's hair 45% " Sunshades covered- with paper or other mate rial'.. 35^ 359 Sunshades, sticks for, of all kinds....30% 62 Super carbonate of sodd >^c. per lb, 306 Surface coated papers 25^ 311 " " " manufactures of 20% 261 Suspenders, of cotton or other vege- table fiber,elastic or non-ela8tic..35 % 284 Suspenders,- of wool or hair 40% 298 " " silk, chief value 40% 644 Sweepings, gold or silver free 216 Sweetmeats, comfits, and^ruits pre- served in sugar, syrup, molas- ses or spirits, n.o.p.f. andjeUies.30^ 137 'Swordblades and swords 35^ 685 Sycamore lumber free 258 Table covers; chenille; 40% 138 " knives 35% 100 " mirrors 35% 147 Tacks, cut 25% 116 Taggers iron and st^el 35^ 119 " tin I i-5d 132 Tailors' irons. 25% 645 TaUow. free 2S3 Talmas woolen or worsted 45 % 489 Tamarinds free 274 Tamboured articles. 40% 496 Tampico ifibre , not hackled free 266 " " cables and cordage.. 10^ 275 " " mfs. of. 30% 641 Tank bottoms free 4 Tannic and tannic 'acid, per ft 35c 16 Tanning, extracts and decoctions for 10^ 468 Tanning! crude articles for. free 148 Tape needles 25% 289 Tapestry brussels carpet.: Tpfo 288 " velvet " 30^: 646 Tapioca free 647 Tar, coal, pitch of. ^ free 647 " wood free 441 " coal, products of n. o. p. f. free 266 Tarred cables- and cordage; 10% 71 Tartar, cream of and patent 25% 5 Tartaric acid 20^ 72 Tartars 25% 73 Tarfrate of soda and potassa lofo 298 Tassels- and cords, silk 40 % 284 " wool 40% 648 Tela.- free 648 Tea plants;; free 372 Teams of animals brought by emi- grants free 649 Teazles; free 68 F. B. Vandegeii'T & Co. Par- Article. Rate. 650 Teeth free 672 Telegraph poles free 675 Timber, squared or sided free 119 Terne and tin plate* per lb. 1.1-5C 651 Terra lalba free 652 Terra Japonica free 496 Textile, grasses, unmanuf d free 272 Thread cotton (see Cotton) 25% and 30% 160 " of gold 25% 296 " " silk 20% 591 Threshing machines free 567 Thyme oil free 457 Ties, cotton cut into lengths free 673 Ties railroad wood free 76 Tiles, plain and encaustic not glazed, ornamented, painted, vitrified..25 % 76 " ornamented, painted glazed etc 40^ 674 Timber, hewn and sawed free 674 " used for spars, and building wharves free 675 " squared or sided free 673 " ship free 672 " round and unmanuf'd free 653 Tin, bars, block or black oxide free " " cassiterite of, grain, granulated. free " " ores and pig free 119 " plates and terne plates per lb, I 1-5C " " tagger's per lb. i 1-5C 17s " manufactures of n.o.p.f. 35^ 33 Tincture of opium 15^ 654 Tinsel wire , tree 84 Tips, lava, plain 3=;% 84 " " ornamented 40^ 305 Tissue paper 25% 185 Tobacco, n.Oip.f. ,,. per lb, .40 184 " filler not stemmed per lb, .35 " " " stemmed 50% 183 " suitable for wrappers, un- stemmed per lb, f i.oo " Tobacco suitable for wrappers stemmed .■ $1.25 357 " pipes (except common clay )5o% " " " common clay per gross .10 187 " cigars and cigarettes per lb, $3.00 and 25% 186 " snuflfand snuff flour...per lb, .40 655 " stems free c6i Toilet soap 35^ .59 " preparations 40^ 6 " waters per gal. f 2, 00 and 25% 656 Tonka beans free 596 .Tools of trade brought by passengers.free 686 Top waste wool, raw, notadvanced..free .286 Tournay carpets 35% 496 Tow of flax or hemp free 319 Toy marbles 25% " Toys except rubber or china 25% Sec. 6. Trademarks penalty for copying. 596 Trade, tools of, brought by. passen- gers free i?7 Track tools, iron or steel 25% 296 Tram silk 20% 587 Trees and plan-ts, nursery stock free 574 Trimmings,- dress (except wool) 40% 284 " " wool 40^ 55o;Trpphies,and prizes,' medals fr«e ,657 Tripoli free 128. Tubes j bailer 25% 274. Tiuckii^gs. (not wool).. 40% Par. Article. Rate. 284 Tuckings, wool 40% 24 Turkey Red oil 30% 660 Turpentine, spirits of. free 659 " Venice free 661 Turtles free 397 Twine, binding free 266 " from istle or fibre lo^ 270 " for nets, webs and seins 30% 296 Twist, silk 20% 169 Type metal and types, new 15^ 662 Types, old free 41 Ultramarine blue 20% 40 Umber, earths Xc per lb. 358 Umbrellas covered with silk, and wool, 45% " " other ma- terialp 35^ 159 Umbrellas, sticks for 30^ 383 United States, articles for free Sec. 3. Unenumerated articles, raw and unmanufactured 10^ " " Uuenumerated articles, manu- lactured 20% 663 Uriaium, oxide of and salts of. free 664 Vaccine virus free 567 Valerian free 665 Valonia free 340 Vamps, leather 20% 42 Varnishes, gold size or japan 25 fo ' " spirits, $1.32 per gal., and 25% 82 Vases, plain 35% 83 " ornamented 40% 590 " platinum, for chemical pur- poses free 38 Vegetable, black....: 20% 275 " fiber manufacturer of... ..30% 518 " ivory free 315 " " buttons 25% 138 " " knives 35% 557 " substance, crude, n. o. p. f. free 668 " wax free 206 Vegetables in natural state, n. o. p. f. 10% 189 " see agricultural products 196 " prepared, etc 30% 372 Vehicles of emigrants free 288 Velvet carpets 30% 257 Velveteens, cotton 40% 29/ Velvets,,silk 45.% 579 Vellum .free 179 Veneers of wood 25.^ 290 Venetian carpets 30% 666 Verdigris, or subaeetate of copper... free 191 Vermicelli 25.% 43 Vermillion, red 20% " Vermillion red, containing quick- silver 6c. per lb. 242 Vermuth soc; per gal. " " $1.60 per case. .234 Vinegar 7>^c. per gal. 587 Vines of all.kinds free 453 Vitrol,. blue free 643 Vitrol oil free 351 Vulcanized India rubber 30% 311 Wads, gun, paper 20^ 667 Wafers free 679 Wagon-blocks free 220 Walnuts, not shelled o2cj per lb. " " shelled o4cjperlb. 685 Walking, canes, uafittished free ; 175 Wares, iron. andJiteel, a. o. p. f. 35% 69 F. B. Vandbgrift & Co. Par. Article. Rate. 248 Warp or warp yarns, (see Cotton)... 41 Wash blue 20^ 146 Washers, iron and steel 25% 360 Waste, n. o. p. f. lofe 666 " wool, raw free 276 " , " advanced or improved. 15% " " slnbbing, roving, ring, gar- . netted, carded and other wool wasts, raw free 456 " cotton free 171 Watches and parts of. 25% " Watch cases 25^ " " glasses and jewels 25% 240 Water, bay or bay-rum $1 per gal, 6 " cologne $2 per gal., and 25^ 575 " color paintings free 46 " color paints, n. o. p. f. 25% 399 " fowls, land and water, free 279 " proof cloth 40% 554 " soda free 554 Waters, mineral free 6 " toilet f 2 per gal. , and 25 % 668 Wax, mineral and vegetable free Wearing apparel, according to ma- terial 261 Webbing, cotton 35% 284 Webbings, wool 40% 270 Webs, flax 30% 127 Wedges, iron and steel ." 25% 468 Weeds for drugs free 671 Whalebone free 567 Whale-oil, American fisheries free 32 '■ " n. o. p. f. 25% 189 Wheat flour 20% " free from countries impos- ing no duty on American pro- ducts 679 Wheels, hubs for free 175 " parts of, iron and steel 35% 154 Wheels, or parts thereof, and steel tired wheels for railways 35 % 507 Whetstones free 349 Whip gut, manufactured 25% 429 ' ' unmanufactured free 44 White Paris 25^ 50 " lead and paint i>^c. perlb. 682 " pineshingles free 44 Whiting 25% 372 Wild animals for exhibition, etc free 197 Willow, manufactures of 25^ 177 " prepared for basket makers..20% 286 Wilton carpets 35^ 274 Window curtain, lace ...40% Window glass, see glass ' 245 Wine, prune, if 18% alcohol, 50 c. pergal 245 " if OTor 18% alcohol, ..$1.80 pergal. 241 Wines, champagne, fS.oo per doz. 14 " coloring for 50% 242 " ginger 50 per gal. 242 " " |i. 60 per case 242 " still 50c. pergal. 242 " incases jfi. 60 per case 122 Wire cloths, iron and steel 35% 122 " coated, with zinc or tin 35 % 122 " corsets 35^ 122 " covered with cotton and silk ..35% 122 " crinoline 35^ 165 " lead iXc. perlb. 122 " nettings 35^ 121 " rods 30% 122 " flat steel 35^ 421 " tinsels free Par. Article. Rate. 393 Witherite , free 387 Wood, ashes and lye of free 178 679 673 685 685 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 673 barrels, casks and emi.*-v 20^ " blocks free " bolts, stave, heading, shin- gles, etc : free Wood box, briar, cabinet cedarj eb- ony, granadiUa, lignum-vitse, lance, mahogony, rose, satin similar woods....- fre~ " sticks of partridge, hair, pi- mento orange, myrtle Iree 672 Wood, logs and round unmanu- factured timber ., free timber hem and sawed -. . . . . free timber squared and sided f'ee sawed boards and plank deals., free pine clapboards... free spruce " free hubs for wheels, posts, last blocks, wagon blocks, oar blocks, gun blocks, heading, etc ; free laths free pickets, palings free shingles free staves, -. free chair cane free hop poles, fire wood, handle bolts, heading bolts, stave bolts, shingle bolts, fence posts, rail- road ties, ship timber, ship planking ; '. free 178 Wood packing boxes, box shooks, casks, barrels, etc ....20% 301 Wood pulp chemical ground 10% 179 " manufactures of n. o. p. f. 25% 468 " for dveing purposes free 276 Wool, of the sheep, hair of the camel, goat, alpaca and other like animals in the form of slubbing, roving, ring, gar- netted or corded waste, mungo, shoddies, carbonised noils or other waste product, any of which has been improved or advanced beyond its original condition as waste 15% 277 Wool, in the form of roving, roping, or tops, valued at not over 35c. per lb 25% valued at over 35c. per lb 30% 686 Wool, raw and all wool and hair on the skin, noils, yam waste, cord waste, bur waste, rags and flocks, wholly or in part of wool free 280 Woolen or worsted blankets, Value at not over 30 c. per lb 25% " at over 30 c. and not over 40 c. per lb 30% Value at over 40 c. per lb.. 35^ *Provided that on blankets over 3 yards in length, the duty will be the same as on woolen cloths. 284 Woolen or worsted, braces, braids, beltings, bindings, galloons, gorings, fringes, gimps, cords, tassels, webbings, elastic or non- elastic 40% 284 Woolen or worsted, laces, embroid- eries, dress trimmings, head- 70 F. B. Vandegrift & Co. Par. Article. Rate. nets, buttons or barrel buttons, buttons for tassels or ornaments, elastic or non-elastic 40% 282 Woolen or worsted, articles of wear- ing apparel, clothing, ready made, made up wholly or in part, including those containing India rubber 45^ 282 Woolen and worsted, felts not woven , n-o. p.f. 45% 280 Woolen and worsted felts for paper makers and printing machines. (See woolen blankets.) 282 Woolen and worted plushes and pile fabrics 45^ 279 Woolen and worsted cloths, shawls, etc 40% 262 Woolen and worsted knit fabrics 279 and mfs. made on knitting ma- chines 40^ Woolen and worsted hats and flan- 280 nels. [See woolen blankets. ) Woolen and worsted dress goods, 281 coat linings, Italian cloths, bun- ings, and similar goods, n o. p. f 40% Woolen and worsted, cloaks, dol- 283 mans, jackets, talmas, ulsters and other outside garments for women and children, made up wholly or in part 45 jg Woolen and worsted carpets, An- 285 bnsson, Axminster, Moquette, chenille, figured or plain 35^ Woolen and worsted carpets, Sax- 286 ony, Wilton, Tournay, velvet, figured or plain ^5% Woolen and worsted carpets, Brus- 287 ' sels 30% Woolen and worsted carpets, velvet 288 and tapestry, figured or plain, printed on warp or otherwise....3o% Woolen and worsted carpets, Tapes- 289 try Brussels 30^ 290 Woolen and worsted carpets, treble ingrain and chain Venetian 30^ 291 Woolen and worsted carpets, wool , Dutch and two-ply ingrain 25% Woolen and worsted carpets, drug- gets and bock in gs, and felt car- peting 25% Woolen and worsted carpets, all car- 71 Par. Article. Rate. £6z pets, n. o. p. f. 25% 294 Woolen and worsted mats, rugs, screens, covers, hassocks, bed- sides, art squares and portions of carpets, shall pay same duty as carpets 285 Woolen and worsted carpets, woven whole for rooms 35% 285 Woolen and worsted Oriental, Berlin and similar rugs 35^ 295 Woolens and worsteds. All duties on goods of this kind take effect July 1st, 1894, and on all except carpets these shall be a reduc- tion each year after 1896 of one per cent. 278 Woolen and worsted yarns, made wholly or in part of Wool, worsted or hair valued at not over 40c. per lb 30% Valued at over 40c. per lb 35% 687 Works of art, for presentation free 688 " " for temporary exhibi- tion free 689 Works of art, for permanent exhibi- tion free 689 Works of art, for erecting a aonu- ment free 349 Worm gut, manufactures of. 25^ 429 " unmanuf'd free 469 Yams f^ee 408 Yarns, coir free cotton, see "cotton thread " ' £ax and hemp, valued at not over 13c. per lb 25% " 30% ' jute 20% ' silk, except spun silk 20% ' woolen and worsted (see woolens). 157 Yellow metal, old 10% 159 " " new 20% 691 Zaffer free 172 Zinc, blocks 20% 248 272 265 296 278 175 174 45 172 173 45 manufactures of n. o. p. f. 35^ old 15% oxide of. 20% pigs 20% sheets 25% paints 20% Energy. Economy. Despatch. We will gladly answer all questions from importers'in con- Ttection with, the tariff. We.will quote- through rates either by express or -freight for one, package or a ship-load, from place of manufacturer to ! home, of consumer, .We are, not under contractwithanyoneRailroad or Steam- ship. Line, and hence are free at all times to secure, customjers lowest possible rates. R B. VANDEQRIFT & CO., NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA 27 William Street. 50 South Fourth Street, ESfEfiGir; EctJWMir: DesrAfCH.' 1 We make applicationsfoc^tke establishmenti of. Wastage "allowance on manufactured artictes of all descriptions (where foreign matetial has been used) and look after the collectian of Drawback- on exportation .- For further information write us. F. B. VANDEGRIFT & CO., Export Brokers and Forwarders, NEW YORK. PHIIiADBLPmA. 27 William Street. 50 South Fourth Street; EisTERav. Economy. Despatch. Our houses and principal representatives in the United ^ States are as follows, viz:- Baltimore, Maryland, 3 Donnell Building, (Gay and Lombard Streets.) Boston, Massachusetts, 2 and 3 India Street. Chicago, Illinois, 98 Jackson Street. Cincinnati, Ohio, Room 2^, Pike's Opera House. Cleveland, Ohio, Room ^, Lemen Building. Detroit, Michigan, 88 Griswold Street. Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 18 Mack Building. New Orleans, Louisiana, 2 Clinton Street. New York, New York, 27 William Street. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, ^o South Fourth Street. Portland, Maine, Custom House. St. Louis, Missouri, 810 Olive Street. San Francisco, California, 5^04 Battery Street. Wilmington, Delaware, 206 East Sixth Street. Correspondents throughout the World. R B. VANDEQRIFT & CO., NEW YORK. PHILADELPHIA, ^^ 27 Williarn Street. 50 South Fourth Street. Energy. Economy. Despatch. We have the decisions of Supreme, Circuit and District Courts of the United States, Board of General Appraisers and Secretary of the Treasury, and in the publication of THE NEW WILSON TARIFF propose to give the articles by name, rate of duty, paragraph of law and decisions bearing on same, also the law relating to the administrations of the Customs service ; thus making this work complete in every detail. Our resources at this time are without comparison. R B. VANDEQRIFT & CO., NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA 37 William Street. 50 South Fourth Street. Energy. Economy. Despatch. We have a complete chain of agents and correspondents throughout the world. . We are regular attendants at the hearings before the Board \ of Appraisers in the interest of importers, jhiv; We publish, monthly, a sailing list of all mail steamers from New York, which will be sent free to any address on ap- plication. ; We solicit foreign accounts, pay duties, collect charges, | make advances, and transact a general import and export business. We are NOT commission merchants. R B. VANDEGRIFT & CO., NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA 27 William Street. 50 South Fourth Street. -m