206 



CONGRESS. (THE TARIFF BILL.) 



company ing pieces, shall pay seventy-five per centum 

 of the duty provided for the gloves* in the fabrication 

 of which they are suitable. 



Miscellaneous Manufactures. 351. Manufactures of 

 amber, asbestos, bladders, coral, cork, catgut, or whip- 

 gut or wormgut, jet, paste, spar, wax, or of which 

 these substances or either of them is the component 

 material of chief value, riot specially provided for in 

 this act, twenty-live per centum ad valorem. 



352. 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 com- 

 ponent material of chief value, not specially provided 

 for in this act, twenty-live per centum ad valorem. 

 But the terms grass and straw shall be understood to 

 mean these substances in their natural form and 

 structure, and not the separated liber thereof. 



353. Manufactures of leather, fur, gutta-percha, 

 vulcanized India rubber (known as hard rubber), 

 human \\s\v, papier-mache, plaster of Paris, indurated - 

 liber wares, and other manufactures 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. 



354. Manufactures of ivory, vegetable ivory, mother 

 of pearl, gelatin, and shell, or of which these sub- 

 stances or either of them is the component material 

 of chief value, not specially provided for in this act, 

 and manufactures known commercially as bead or 

 beaded trimmings or ornaments, thirty-five per cen- 

 tum ad valorem. 



355. Masks, composed of paper or pulp, twenty -five 

 per centum ad valorem. 



356. Matting and mats made of cocoa fiber or 

 rattan, twenty per centum ad valorem. 



357. Pencils of wood filled with lead or other mate- 

 rial, and slate pencils covered with wood, fifty per 

 centum ad valorem ; all other slate pencils, thirty 

 per centum ad valorem. 



358. Pencil leads not in wood, ten per centum ad 

 valorem. 



358i. Photographic dry plates or films, twenty-five 

 per centum ad valorem. 



359. 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 and pipe bowls 

 made wholly of clay, valued at not more than fifty 

 cents per gross, ten per centum ad valorem. 



3(50. Umbrellas, parasols, and sunshades, covered 

 with material composed wholly or in part of silk, 

 wool, worsted, the hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, or 

 other animals, or other material than paper, forty-five 

 per centum ad valorem. 



361. Sticks for umbrellas, parasols, and sunshades, 

 if plain or carved, finished or unfinished, thirty per 

 centum ad valorem. 



362. Waste, riot specially provided for in this act, 

 ten per centum ad valorem. 



FHEE LIST. 



SEC. 2. On and after the 1st day of August, 1894, 

 unless otherwise provided for in this act, the follow- 

 ing articles, when imported, shall be exempt from 

 duty; 



363. Acids used for medicinal, chemical, or manu- 

 facturing purposes not especially provided for in this 

 act 



364. Aconite. 



365. Acorns, raw, dried or undried, but unground. 



366. Agates, unmanufactured. 



367. Albumen. 



368. Alizarin, and alizarin colors or dyes, natural or 

 artificial. 



369. Amber and amberoid, unmanufactured, or 

 crude gum. 



370. "Ambergris. 

 372. Aniline salts. 



373. 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 registered in the book 

 of record" established for that breed, and the Secre- 

 tary of the Treasury may prescribe such additional 

 regulations as may be required for the strict enforce- 

 ment of this provision. Cattle, horses, sheep, or other 

 domestic animals which have strayed across the 

 boundary line into any foreign country, or have been 

 or may be driven across such boundary line by the 

 owner" for pasturage purposes, together with their in- 

 crease, may be brought back to the United States free 

 of duty, under regulations to be prescribed by the 

 Secretary of the Treasury. 



374. Animals brought into the United States tem- 

 porarily for a period not exceeding six months, for 

 the purpose of exhibition or competition for prizes of- 

 fered bv any agricultural or racing association but a 

 bond shall be given in accordance with regulations 

 proscribed by the Secretary of the Treasury ; also, 

 teams of animals, including 'their harness and tackle 

 and the waggons or other vehicles actually owned by 

 persons emigrating from foreign countries to the 

 United States with their families, and in actual use 

 for the purpose of such emigration under such regula- 

 tions as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe ; 

 and wild animals intended for exhibition in zoolog- 

 ical collections for scientific and educational purposes, 

 and not for sale or profit. 



375. Annatto, roucou, rocoa, or Orleans, and all ex- 

 tracts of. 



376. Antimony ore, crude sulphite of, and antimony, 

 as regulus or metal. 



377". Apatite. 



380. Argal, or argol, or crude tartar. 



381. Arrowroot, raw or unmanufactured. 



382. Arsenic and sulphide of, or orpiment. 



383. Arseniate of aniline. 



384. Art educational stops, composed of glass and 

 metal, and valued at not more than six cents per 

 gross. 



385. Articles imported by the United States. 



386. Articles in a crude state used in dyeing or 

 tanning, not specially provided for in this act. 



387. Articles the growth, produce, and manufacture 

 of the United States, when returned after having 

 been exported, 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 manufacture ex- 

 ported filled with American products, or exported 

 empty and returned filled with foreign products, in- 

 cluding shocks when retutned as barrels or boxes 

 also, quicksilver flasks or bottles, of either domestic 

 or foreign manufacture, which shall have been actu- 

 ally exported from the United States ; but proof of 

 the identity of such articles shall be made under gen- 

 eral 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 thereof, and if any such 

 articles are subject to internal tax at the time' of ex- 

 portation such tax shall be proved to have been paid 

 before exportation and not refunded : Provided, That 

 this paragraph shall not apply to any article upon 

 which an allowance of drawback has been made, the 

 reimportation of which is hereby prohibited except 



upon payment of duties equal to the drawbacks al- 

 lowed ; or any article manufactured in bonded 

 warehouse and exported under any provision of law ; 

 And provided further, That when" manufactured to- 

 bacco which has been exported 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. 

 888. Asbestos, unmanufactured. 



389. Ashes, wood and lye of, and beet-root ashes. 



390. Asphaltum and bitumen, crude or dried, but 

 not otherwise manipulated or treated. 



