CONGRESS. (THE TARIFF MEASURE.) 



225 



707. Skeletons and other preparations of anatomy. 



708. Snails. 



709. Soda, nitrate of, or cubic nitrate, and chlo- 

 rate of. 



710. Sodium. 



711. Spurterre, suitable for making or ornamenting 



712. Specimens of natural history, botany, and min- 

 eralogy, when imported for cabinets or as objects of 

 science, and not for sale. 



Spices. 713. Cassia, cassia vera, and cassia buds, 

 unground. 



714. Cinnamon, and chips of, unground. 



715. Cloves, and clove stems ungrouud. 



716. Ginger root, unground and not preserved or 

 candied. 



717. Mace. 



718. Nutmegs. 



719. Pepper, black or white, unground. 



720. Pimento, unground. 



721. Spunk. 



722. Spurs and stilts used in the manufacture of 

 earthen, porcelain, and stone ware. 



723. Stone and sand : Burr stone in blocks, rough 

 or manufactured, and not bound up into mill stones ; 

 cliff stone, unmanufactured, pumice stone, rotten 

 stone, and sand, crude or manufactured. 



724. Storax, or styrax. 



725. Strontia, oxide of, and" protoxide of strontian, 

 and strontianite, or mineral carbonate of strontia. 



726. Sugars, all not above number sixteen Dutch 

 standard in color, all tank bottoms, all sugar drain- 

 ings and sugar sweepings, sirups of cane juice, ine- 

 lada, concentrated melada, and concrete and concen- 



i trated molasses, and molasses. 



727. Sulphur, lac or precipitated, and sulphur or 

 brimstone crude, in bulk, sulphur ore, as pyrites, or 

 sulphuret of iron in its natural state, containing in ex- 

 cess of twenty-five per centum of sulphur (except on 

 the copper contained therein) and sulphur not other- 



! wise provided for. 



728. Sulphuric acid which at the temperature of 

 sixty degrees Fahrenheit does not exceed the specific 

 gravity of one and three hundred and eighty thou- 

 sandths, for use in manufacturing superphosphate of 

 lime or artificial manures of any kind, or for any 

 agricultural purposes. 



729. Sweepings of silver and gold. 



730. Tapioca, cassava or cassady. 



731. Tar and pitch of wood, and pitch of coal tar. 



732. Tea and tea plants. 



733. Teeth, natural or unmanufactured. 



734. Terra alba. 



735. Terra japonica. 



736. Tin ore, cassiterite or black oxide of tin, and 

 tin in bars, blocks, pigs, or grain or granulated, until 

 July the first, eighteen hundred and ninety-three, 

 {and thereafter as otherwise provided for in this act. 



737. Tinsel wire, lame, or lahn. 



738. Tobacco sterns. 



739. Tonquin, tonqua, or tonka beans. 



740. Tripoli. 



741. Turmeric. 



742. Turpentine, Venice. 



743. Turpentine, spirits of. 



744. Turtles. 



745. Types, old and fit only to be remanufactured. 



746. Uranium, oxide and salts of. 



747. Vaccine virus. 



748. Vilonia. 



749. Verdigris, or subacetate of copper. 



750. Wafers, unmedicated. 



751. Wax, vegetable or mineral. 



752. Wearing apparel and other personal effects 

 not merchandise) of persons arriving in the United 

 states, but this exemption shall not be held to include 

 articles not actually in use and necessary and appro- 

 bate for the use of such persons for the purposes of 



eir journey and present comfort and convenience, 

 )r which are intended for any other person or per- 

 sons, or for sale : Provided, however, That all such 

 VOL. xxx. 15 A 



wearing apparel and other personal effects as may 

 have been once imported into the United States and 

 subjected to the payment of duty, and which may 

 have been actually used and taken or exported to 

 foreign countries by the persons returning therewith 

 to the United States, shall, if not advanced in value 

 or improved in condition by any means since their 

 exportation from the United States, be entitled to ex- 

 emption from duty, upon their identity being estab- 

 lished, under such rule and regulations as may be 

 prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury. 



753. Whalebone, unmanufactured. 



754. Wood. Logs, and round unmanufactured tim- 

 ber not specially enumerated or provided for in this 

 act. 



755. Fire wood, handle bolts, heading bolts, stave 

 bolts and shingle bolts, hop poles, fence posts, rail- 

 road ties, ship timber, and ship planking, not spe- 

 cially provided for in this act. 



756. Woods, namely, cedar, lignum vitse, lance- 

 wood, ebony, box, granadilla, mahogany, rosewood, 

 satinwood, and all forms of cabinet woods, in the 

 log, rough or hewed ; bamboo and rattan unmanufact- 

 ured ; brier root or brier wood, and similar wood 

 unmanufactured, or not further manufactured than 

 cut into blocks suitable for the articles into which 

 they are intended 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 walk- 

 ing canes ; and India malacca joints, not further man- 

 ufactured than cut into suitable lengths for the man- 

 ufactures into which they are intended to be con- 

 verted. 



757. Works of art, the production of American art- 

 ists residing^temporarily abroad, or other works of art, 

 including pictorial paintings on glass, imported ex- 

 pressly tor presentation to a national institution, or to 

 any State or municipal corporation, or incorporated re- 

 ligious society, college, or other public institution, ex- 

 cept 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. 



758. Works of art, drawings, engravings, photo- 

 graphic pictures, and philosophical and scientific ap- 

 paratus brought by professional artists, lecturers, or 

 scientists arriving from abroad for use by them tem- 

 porarily for exhibition and in illustration, promotion, 

 and encouragement of art, science, or industry in the 

 United States, and not for sale, and photographic pict- 

 ures, paintings, and statuary, imported for exhibition 

 by any association established in good faith and duly 

 authorized 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 in- 

 tended tor 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 of such articles as shall not 

 be exported within six months after such importation : 

 fomded, That the Secretary of the Treasury may, in 

 his discretion, extend such period for a further term 

 of six months in cases where applications therefor shall 

 be made. 



759. Works of art, collections in illustration of the 

 progress of the arts, science, or manufactures, photo- 

 graphs, works in terra-cotta, parian, pottery, or porce- 

 lain, and artistic copies of antiquities in metal or 

 other material hereinafter 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 imported in 

 good faith by any society or association for the pur- 

 pose of erecting a public monument, and not intended 

 for sale, nor for any other purpose than herein ex- 

 pressed; but bonds shall be given under such rules 

 and regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may 



