Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 26.djvu/639

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

FIFTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Ssss. I. Ch. 1244. 1890. 585 prior to the first day of A ril, eighteen hundred and ninet -0ne, 8°¤'¤”'·* E- sugars not exceeding numlber sixteen Dutch standard in ycolor S°g°r"°°°m°°d` may be refined in bond without payment of duty, and such MR·a¤¤i¤s» vw-- i¤ refined sugars may transported ond and storedin bonded ° ` warehouse at such points of destination as are provided in existing laws relating to the immediate transportation of dutiable oods in bond, under such rules andregulations as shall be prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury. Scnmnunm F.—TOBACC0 AND MANu1s·Ac·rum¤s or. mgcrrgngdrgmu » factures ol. 242. Leaf tobacco suitable for cigar-wrappgiés, if not stemmed, two dollars per pound; if ·stemmed, two do s and seventy-ive centgper pound: Provided, That if any portion of any tobacco im- Mm. port in any bale, box, or package, or in bulk shall be suitable for A person mmm cigar-wrappgs, the entire %uantity of tobacco contained in such bale, §§',@*f¥,§,ff·d$?,}‘g box, or pac ge, or bulk s all be dutiable; if not stemmed, at two M ' dollars pelr pound; if stemmed, at two dollars and seventy-five cents per poun . 243. All other tobacco in leaf, unmanufactured and not stemmed, thirty-five cents per pound; if stemmed fifty cents per pound. 244. Tobacco, manufactured, of all descriptions, not specially enumerated or provided for in this act, forty cents per poun . 245. Snuif and snulf flour, manufactured of tobacco, ground dry, or damp, and péckled, scented, or otherwise, of all descriptions, fifty cents r poun . 246.pOigars, cigarettes and cheroots of all hnds, four dollars and fifty cents per pound and twently-five per centum ad valorem; and paper cigars and cigarettes, inc udin wrappers, shall be subject to the same duties as are herein upon cigars. SCHEDULE G.——AeBIOULTURAL PRODUCTS AND PROVISIONS. A:&¤us:>gr;¤dGémd_ ucts and provisions. Axmnns, LIVE- . Live ummm. 247. Horses and mules, thirty dollars per head: Promded That ummm. horses valued at one hundred and nfty dollars and over nmtsmmmm. shall pay a duty of thirty per centum ad valorem. 248. Cattle, more than pipe year 0 dig? dollars per head; one year old or ess, two dollars per e . 249. Hogs, one dollar and fifty cents per head. 250. Shee , one year old or more, one dollar and fifty cents per head; less than one year old, seventy-five cents per head. 251. All other live animalshnotlspecially provided for in this act, twenty per centum a va orem. BREADSTUFFS AND FARINACEOUS SUBSTANCES—· mmamsmnm. 252. Barley, thirty cents per bushel of fortyeight pounds. i""°°°““ '“"“°“‘°°’· 253. Barley-malt, forty-five cents per bushe of thirty-four pounds. 254. Barley, pearled, patent, or hulled, two cents per pound. 255. Buckwheat, fifteen cents per bushel of forty-eight pounds. 256. Corn or maize, fifteen cents pier bushel of fifty-six pounds. 257. Corn-meal, twenty cents (per ushel of forty-eight pounds. 258. Macaroni, vermicelli, an all similar= preparations, two cents r pound. 259. Ogts, fifteen cents per bushel. 260. Oatmeal, one cent per pound. _ 261. Rice, cleaned, two cents per dpound; uncleaned rice, one and one-quarter cents per poun ; paddly, three-quarters of one cent per pound; rice-flour, rice-mea , and rice, broken, which will pass through a sieve known commercially as number twelve wire sieve, one-fourth of one cent per pound.