Agricultural Masses. Not Protected. 25 



Items. Class 1. Class 2. Class 3. 



Bananas, currants, 



dates, almonds, figs, 



cocoanuts, etc., $10,697,000 



India'O, singer, spices, 



vanilla'^beans, " 6,074,000 



Tea, 10,558,000 



Class 2. Protected — 



Sheep and wool. $21,626,000 



Semi-tropical products, 



lemons, ' oranges, 



plums, prunes, etc., 8,565.000 



Rice, rice meal. etc. 2,279.000 



Sugar and molasses, 101,141,000 



Tobacco, unmanufactured, 13,297,000 



Class 3. Unprotected- 

 Animals alive (not in- 

 cluding sheep) , $3,166,000 

 Hides, cattle and other 

 (not includinsr goat 



skins), ^ • 35,948.000 



Meat products, ■ 1,215,000 



Dairv products, 1,814.000 



Other animal matter, 9,996.000 



Breadstuffs, ■ 1,804.000 



Cotton, flax and hemp, 10,057,000 



Vegetables, , 2.935,000 



Other vegetable matter, 4,677,000 



Totals, $177,602,000 $146,908,000 $71,612,000 



Percentage each class, 42.28 34.97 17.04 



In the table given in the Year Book are items that are 

 clearly manufactured products. Why they are included 

 among, and designated, agricultural products we cannot 

 explain. The value of the total of these importations is 

 $24,000,000, or 5.71% of all the agricultural imports for 

 that vear. 



^Ye divide the agricultural imports into three classes. 

 Class 1 consists of articles not produced at all in the 



