CONGRESS. (THE TARIFF BILL.) 



207 



391. Asafcetida. 



392i. Bagging for cotton, gunny cloth, and similar 

 material suitable for covering cotton, composed in 

 whole or in part of hemp, flax, jute, or jute butts. 



393. Balm of Gilead. 



394. Barks, cinchona or other, from which quinine 

 may be extracted. 



395. Baryta, carbonate of, or witherite, and baryta, 

 sulphate of, or barytes, unmanufactured, including 

 barytes earth. 



396. Bauxite, or beauxite. 



397. Beeswax. 



398. Bells, broken, and bell metal broken and fit 

 only to be remanufactured. 



399. All binding twine manufactured in whole or 

 in part from New Zealand hemp, istle or Tampico 

 liber, sisal grass or sunn, of single ply, and measuring 

 not exceeding six hundred feet to the pound, and 

 manilla twine not exceeding six hundred and fifty 

 feet to the potmd. 



400. Bird skins, prepared for preservation, but not 

 further advanced in manufacture. 



401. Birds and land and water fowls. 



402. Bismuth. 



403. Bladders, and fish sounds or bladders, crude, 

 and all integuments of animals, salted for preserva- 

 tion, and unmanufactured, not specially provided for 

 in this act. 



404. Blood, dried. 



405. Blue vitriol, or sulphate of copper. 



406. Bologna sausages. 



407. Bolting cloths, especially for milling purposes, 

 but not suitable for the manufacture of wearing ap- 

 parel. 



408. Bones, crude, or not burned, calcined, ground, 

 steamed, or otherwise manufactured, and bone dust 

 or animal carbon, and bone ash, fit only for fertil- 

 izing purposes. 



410. Books, engravings, photographs, bound or 

 unbound, etching's, music, maps, and charts, which 

 shall have been printed more than twenty-five years 

 at the date of importation, and all hydrographic 

 charts and scientific books and periodicals devoted 

 exclusively to original scientific research, and publi- 

 cations issued for their subscribers by scientific and 

 literary associations or academies, or publications of 

 individuals for gratuitous private circulation, and 

 public documents issued by foreign governments. 



411. Books and pamphlets printed exclusively in 

 languages other than English ; also books and music, 

 in raised print, used exclusively by the blind. 



412. Books, engravings, photographs, etchings, 

 bound or unbound, maps, and charts imported by au- 

 thority or for the use of the United States or for the 

 use of the Library of Congress. 



413. Books, maps, music, 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 

 encouragement of the fine arts, or for the use or by 

 order of any college, academy, school, or seminary of 

 learning in the United States, or any State or public 

 library, subject to such regulations as the Secretary 

 of the Treasury shall prescribe. 



414. Books, libraries, usual furniture, 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, not for sale. 



416. Brazil paste. 



417. 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. 



418. Brazilian pebble, unwrought or unmanufac- 

 tured. 



419. Breccia, in block or slabs. 



420. Bristles, crude, not sorted, bunched, or pre- 

 pared. 



421. Bromine. 



422. Broom corn. 



423. Bullion, gold or silver. 



424. Burgundy pitch. 



424i. Burlaps, and bags for grain made of burlaps. 



425. Cabbages. 



426. Old coins and medals and other antiquities ; 

 but the term u antiquities" as used in this act shall 

 include only such articles as are suitable for souve- 

 nirs or cabinet collections, and which shall have been 

 produced at any period prior to the year 1700. 



427. Cadmium. 



428. Calamine. 



429. Camphor, crude. 



430. Castor or castoreum. 



431. Catgut, whipgut, or wormgut, unmanufactured 

 or not further manufactured than in strings or 

 cords. 



432. Cerium. 



433. Chalk, unmanufactured. 



434. Charcoal. 



435. Chicory root, raw, dried or undried, but un- 

 grouncl. 



436. Cider. 



437. Civet, crude. 



438. Chromate of iron, or chromic ore. 



439. Clay : Common blue clay in casks suitable for 

 the manufacture of crucibles. 



441. Coal, anthracite, and coal stores of American 

 vessels, but none shall be unloaded. 



443. Coal tar, crude, and all preparations except 

 medicinal coal-tar preparations and products of coal 

 tar, not colors or dyes, not specially provided for in 

 this act. 



444. Cobalt and cobalt ore. 



445. Cocculus indieus. 

 44*6. Cochineal. 



447. Cocoa, or cacao, crude, leaves and shells of. 



448. Coffee. 



449. Coins, gold, silver, and copper. 



450. Coir, and coir yarn. 



451. Copper imported in the form of ores. 



452. Old copper, fit only for manufacture, 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. 



453. Copper, regulus of, and black or coarse copper 

 and copper cement. 



454. Copper in plates, bars, ingots, or pigs and other 

 forms, not manufactured, not specially provided for 

 in this act. 



455. Copperas, or sulphate of iron. 



456. Coral, marine, uncut and unmanufactured. 



457. Cork wood or cork bark, unmanufactured. 



458. Cotton and cotton waste or flocks. 



459. Cotton ties of iron or steel cut to lengths, 

 punched or not punched, with or without buckles, for 

 baling cotton. 



460. Cyrolite, or kyrolith. 



461. Cudbear. 



462. Curling stones or quoits, and curling-stone 

 handles. 



463. Curry and curry powder. 



464. Cutch. 



465. Cuttlefish bone. 



4(56. Dandelion roots, dried or undried, but un- 

 ground.' 



467. Diamonds ; miners', glaziers', and engravers' 

 diamonds, not set, and diamond dust or bort, and 

 jewels to be used in the manufacture of watches or 

 clocks. 



468. Divi-divi. 



461). Dragon's blood. 



470. 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 drugs which are not 

 edible, and which have not been advanced in value 

 or condition by refining or grinding, or by other pro- 



