PROHIBITION OF SEALING. - 247 
apparatus or implements were used in violation of this Act until the contrary is 
proved to the satisfaction of the court. 
Seo. 5. That any violation of this Act or of the regulations thereunder may be 
‘ prosecuted either in the district court of Alaska or in any district court of the United 
States in California, Oregon, or Washington. 
Skc. 6. That this Act shall not interfere with the privileges accorded to Indians 
dwelling on the coast of the United States under section six of the Act of April sixth, 
eighteen hundred and ninety-four, but the limitations prescribed in said Act shall 
remain in full force. 
Sec. 7. That this Act shall not affect in any way-the killing or taking of fur seals 
upon the Pribilof Islands, or the laws of the United States relating thereto. 
Sec. 8. That any officer of the Naval or Revenue-Cutter Service of the United 
States, and any other officers duly designated by the President, may search any 
vessel of the United States in port or on the high seas suspected of having violated 
or of having an intention to violate the provisions of this Act, and may seize such 
yessel and the offending officers and crew and bring them into the most accessible 
port of the States and Territory mentioned in section five of this Act for trial. 
Szc. 9. That the importation into the United States by any person whatsoever of 
fur-seal skins taken in the waters mentioned in this Act, whether raw, dressed, dyed, 
or manufactured, is hereby prohibited, and all such articles imported after this Act 
shall take effect shall not be permitted to be exported, but shall be seized and’ 
destroyed by the proper officers of the United States. 
Src. 10. That the President shall have power to make all necessary regulations 
to carry this Act into effect. 
Approved, December 29, 1897. 
REGULATIONS. 
1. No fur-seal skins, whether raw, dressed, dyed, or otherwise manufactured, shall 
be admitted to entry in the United States unless there shall be attached to the invoice 
a certificate, signed by the United States consul at the place of exportation, that said 
skins were not taken from seals killed within the waters mentioned in said act, 
specifying in detail the locality of such taking, whether on land or at sea, and also the 
person from whom said skins were purchased in their raw and dressed state, the date 
of such purchase, and the lot number. Consuls shall require satisfactory evidence of 
the truth of such facts by oath or otherwise before giving any such certificate. 
No fur-seal skins, whether raw, dressed, dyed, or otherwise manufactured, shall 
be admitted to entry as part of a passenger’s personal effects unless accompanied 
by an invoice certified by the consul as herein provided. 
All far-seal skins, whether raw, dressed, dyed, or otherwise manufactured, the 
invoices of which are not accompanied by the certificate above prescribed, shall be 
seized by the collector of customs and destroyed as provided for in section 9 of the act 
of December 29, 1897. 
2. Every article manufactured in whole or in part from fur-seal skins, the invoice 
of which is presented as aforesaid to the consul, shall have legibly stamped thereon 
the name of the manufacturer and the place of manufacture, and shall be accompanied 
by astatement in writing, under the oath of said manufacturer, that said skin or skins 
