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Cross bars, manufactured from imported material; allow as on portable railway sections.

Cross connecting boards, manufactured by the Ericsson Telephone Company, of New York, N.Y., with the use of imported lightning protector strips. T. D. 24815.

Crossings, frogs, and switches: Department's instructions, T. D. 19122, extended to crossings, frogs, and switches, manufactured from imported steel rails by the Lorain Steel Company, of Johnstown, Pa. T. D. 24097.

Crucible steel and farriers' tools, manufactured by the Heller Brothers Company, of Newark, N. J., in part from Swedish iron combined with domestic iron. T. D. 24166.

Crude petroleum. Duties collected under paragraph 626, act of 1897, on crude petroleum not within section 3027, Revised Statutes, but may be refunded by way of drawback. T. D. 24199.

Crystal fashion plates, manufactured by the Crystal Fashion Plate Company, of New York City, in part from imported sheet celluloid; allow under T. D. 16924.

Crystal plate glass, used in the construction of passenger cars built by the. J. G. Brill Co., of Philadelphia, Pa. T. D. 17896.

Crystallized. (See Crystallized tin plates.)

Crystallized tin plates, manufactured from imported tin plates; base allowance on quantity of material used equal to the quantity of the exported plates, to be determined by either weight or measurement and inspection of such exported articles.

Cuba: Goods exported to Cuba entitled to drawback. T. D. 22157.

Cuban palm hats, bleached, and hat bodies, manufactured by the R. H. Comey Company, of Camden, N.J., from imported, unbleached Cuban hats. T. D. 23596, extended. T. D. 29424.

Cuban sugar products: Twenty per cent reduction of import duties results in 20 per cent reduction of drawback. T. D. 25203. Cuff cases, leather. (See Leather bags, belts, etc.) Cups, tin. (See Tin boxes, cans, etc.)

Currants. (See Cleaned currants.)

Curtain slats, manufactured from imported pine lumber by the Vermont Shade Roller Company. T. D. 22000. Cuspidors, tin. (See Tin boxes, cans, etc.)

Cutlery and safety razors. (See Sterling-silver cutlery, etc.) Cut mica, manufactured by the Mica Manufacturing Company, of New York City, wholly from imported uncut mica. T. D. 26045.

Cut mica, manufactured by Eugene Munsell & Co., of New York City, from imported uncut mica. T. D. 26045, extended. T. D. 28115.

Cut nails, manufactured wholly from steel slabs. T. D. 24121. Cut nails, manufactured wholly from imported steel slabs. T. D. 24174.

Cut soles: Regulations, T. D. 19427, extended to exportations of cut soles, manufactured by W. H. McElwain Company, of Boston, Mass., from domestic tanned imported hides. T. D. 25449. Cutting plates, manufactured from imported brass by Smithers, Nordenholt & Co., of New York, N.Y. T. D. 24095. Cut tobacco, manufactured from imported leaf tobacco by Mihran Ateshian, of Boston, Mass. T. D. 24555.

Cyanide of potassium, manufactured by the Roessler & Hass

(Note. Accuracy and precision in customs proceedings are so essential to the interests of importers that the services of a competent broker are usually worth vastly more than the small cost or such services.)

lacher Chemical Company, of New York, N. Y., in the manufacture of which no other than imported yellow prussiate of potash is used. T. D. 19516.

Cyclopedic concordances of the Bible, manufactured by the Oxford University Press Company, of New York, N. Y., wholly with the use of imported sheets of printing paper. T. D. 24826. Cylindrical grinding machines, manufactured by the Landis Tool Company, of Waynesboro, Pa., with the use of imported pig iron. T. D. 27990.

Daly's white paste. (See Paste.)

Damasks. (See Brocatelles and damasks; Silk damasks.)

Dates, selecting, cleaning, and packing in the United States, denied.

Dates, stuffed and pitted, manufactured by the Hills Brothers Company, of New York City, with the use of imported dates, nuts, ginger, and granulated sugar. T. D. 27351.

Dates, treated sterilized, manufactured by the Hills Brothers Company, of New York City, with the use of imported dates and granulated sugar. T. D. 27399.

Dates, manufactured by William Hills, Jr., of New York City, with the use of imported dates. T. D. 27696.

Decalcomania paper, manufactured by the Meyerford Company, of Chicago, Ill. T. D. 22487.

Decorated. (See Decorated tin plates.)

Decorated lamp shades, manufactured by Clark Brothers' Lamp, Brass and Copper Company, of Trenton, N. J., from imported plain porcelain shades, and by Trenton Lamp Company, of Trenton, N. J., from imported plain glass shades; allow under T. D. 13479 and 14340, respectively.

Decorated tin plates, manufactured from plain tin plates; base allowance on quantity of the plain plates used equal to the quantity of such material in the exported plates, to be determined by weight or measurement and inspection of the finished plates, proper allowance being made for addition to such weight in process of manufacture.

Degras and quebracho extract. (See Quebracho extract.) Degreased sheepskins, manufactured by the United States and Canada Degreasing Company, of Brooklyn, N.Y., from imported skins; allow under T. D. 16235.

Dental chairs, manufactured by the Ritter Dental Manufacturing Company, of Rochester, N. Y., with the use of imported plush. T. D. 25247.

Dental cream, collapsible tubes of, manufactured by Colgate & Co., of New York, with the use of imported block-tin tubes. T. D. 29381.

Dental plaster, manufactured by the Higginson Manufacturing Company, of Newburgh, N.Y., with the use of imported gypsum. T. D. 29366.

Dental and talcum powders, manufactured by Colgate & Co., Jersey City, N. J. T. D. 29669.

Desiccated cocoanut, manufactured by L. Schepp & Co., of New York City, wholly from imported cocoanuts and refined granulated sugar, used in condition as imported, or refined from imported raw sugar; allow under T. D. 16780.

Desiccated cocoanut, manufactured by Bussing & Graef, of Jersey City, N. J. T. D. 18662.

Diamond dyes and improved butter color, manufactured by Wells & Richardson Company, of Burlington, Vt., in which ani

(Note. Accuracy and precision in customs proceedings are so essential to the interests of importers that the services of a competent broker are usually worth vastly more than the small cost or such services.)

line or coal-tar colors imported in bulk are used. T. D. 22714 and 22580.

Dining cars. (See Cars.)

Doors.

(See Glazed window sash and doors.)

Doors, manufactured by A. Roberson & Son, Binghamton, N.Y., wholly with the use of imported white-pine lumber. T. D. 23840.

Doors: Department's regulations, T. D. 23840, extended to doors, manufactured wholly with the use of white-pine lumber by T. W. Thayer & Co., of Cazenovia, N.Y. T. D. 24091.

Doors: T. D. 23840, extended to cover the exportation of doors of various sizes and grades, manufactured by Thomas Jackson & Co., of Saginaw, Mich., in part from imported pine lumber. T. D. 26294.

Doors: Extension of regulations in T. D. 23840 to doors, etc., manufactured by the McConnell Manufacturing Company, of Hornellsville, N.Y., with imported white-pine lumber. T. D. 24484.

Doors and mouldings, manufactured from imported lumber; base allowance on quantity of lumber used, to be determined by "board measurement" of parts of doors and of finished mouldings.

Doors, window sash, blinds, and frames, manufactured from imported white pine lumber. Previous regulations revoked. T. D. 26333.

Dock rivets. (See Railroad spikes, etc.)

Doradilla elixir, Ulrici's morrhual malt wine, and Ulrici's celebrine cordial wine, manufactured by the Ulrici Medicine Company, of New York City, with the use of imported alcohol. T. D. 27301.

Down. (See Feathers and down.)

Down, cleaned and renovated, manufactured by the P. R. Mitchell Company, of Cincinnati, Ohio, from imported uncleaned down. T. D. 29920.

Drawback denied: Selecting, cleaning, and packing dates not a manufacture. T. D. 24981.

Drawback denied: Manipulation and repacking of "naturals" as "pulled figs," not a manufacture. (See Drawback on figs.) T. D. 24982.

Drawback denied: Locomotives not entitled to drawback, upon exportation, after having been used in this country. T. D. 25008. Drawback denied: "Belinda" chewing plug tobacco, made from Sumatra clippings, not a bona fide manufacture. T. D. 25009.

Drawback denied: Unpacking, picking over, and repacking in fresh brine, imported Spanish olives, not a manufacture. T. D. 25013.

Drawback denied: Fitting of imported golf-club heads on domestic shafts, not a manufacture. (See Drawback on golf clubs.) T. D. 25032.

Drawback denied: Dried grains from residue of brewing vats. Drawback on dried grains prepared from the residue in brewing vats disallowed on the following grounds: Quantity or measure of imported rice can not be ascertained in the article for export; not a manufacture within the meaning of section 30, act of 1897; establishment of rate of drawback impracticable. T. D. 25058.

(Note. Accuracy and precision in customs proceedings are so essential to the interests of importers that the services of a competent broker are usually worth vastly more than the small cost or such services.)

Drawback denied: Finishing and fitting of chair parts imported "in the rough," not a manufacture. T. D. 25060.

Drawback denied: Vacuum brakes, rubber springs, and Pintsch light equipment withdrawn from customs custody and exported as unattached parts of cars, manufactured by the American Car and Foundry Company, of St. Louis, Mo., not entitled to drawback, under the provisions of section 3025 of the Revised Statutes of the United States or section 30, act of 1897. T. D. 25094.

Drawback denied: Bags used prior to exportation. T. D. 25099. Drawback denied: Cutting of sole leather into strips, jumbo blocks, and squares, not a manufacture. T. D. 25279.

Drawback goods in transit from port to port in the United States through foreign territory: Drawback goods which leave the United States at one frontier port, cross adjacent foreign territory, and re-enter the United States at another frontier port before final exportation to be treated as exported as soon as they have passed through the first frontier port. T. D. 24892. Drawbars, car. (See Railway cars.)

Dredge pins and bushings, frogs and switches, gears and pinions, stone crusher castings, and other products, manufactured by the Taylor Iron and Steel Company, of High Bridge, N. J., in part from imported ferromanganese. T. D. 29345.

Dress bindings, manufactured by the Velutina Bias Company, of New York, N.Y., wholly from imported velveteens or corduroys, dyed or in the gray. T. D. 20493.

Dress binding, velveteen. (See Velveteen dress binding, etc.) Dress shields, manufactured by the I. B. Kleinert Rubber Company, of New York City, in part from imported cotton galloon binding, and piece silk; allow under letter January 15, 1896, to collector, New York.

Dress shields, manufactured by the I. B. Kleinert Rubber Company, of New York, N. Y., extended to similar manufactures of said company, known as "half silk-covered," cotton-bound, and "silk covers" without binding. T. D. 23103.

Dress shields: Department's regulations of January 15, 1896, extended to dress shields with shoulder-strap attachment, manufactured by the I. B. Kleinert Rubber Company, of New York, N.Y. T. D. 24405.

Dress shields, manufactured by the I. B. Kleinert Rubber Company, of New York City, with the use of imported silk in the piece and cotton galloon binding. T. D. 26357.

Dress shields and infants' specialties, manufactured by the Canfield Rubber Company, of Bridgeport, Conn., with the use of imported binding, beading, tape, lace, and Japanese silk. T. D. 27813.

Dress shields, manufactured by the I. B. Kleinert Rubber Company, of New York City, in part from imported silk in the piece and imported cotton galloon binding. Department's regulations extended to cover certain other styles. T. D. 29270.

Dressed lumber, manufactured from imported rough lumber, if planed on two sides, or on one side and both edges; base allowance on quantity of rough lumber used, to be determined by "board measurement" of the exported dressed lumber.

Dried grains prepared from residue in brewing vats: Drawback denied. (See Drawback denied.)

Drills, steel. (See Steel drills.)

Driving wheels. (See Locomotives and driving wheels.)

(Note. Accuracy and precision in customs proceedings are so essential to the interests of importers that the services of a competent broker are usually worth vastly more than the small cost or such services.)

Drum, tin.

(See Ten-gallon drums, etc.)

Drums, metal. (See Metal drums.)

Drums, ten-gallon. (See Ten-gallon drums, etc.)

Dry colors, manufactured by Pfeiffer & Lavanburg, of New York City, in part from imported quicksilver, orange mineral or red lead, and by the F. W. Devoe and C. T. Raynolds Company, of New York City, in part from imported quicksilver; allow under T. D. 11770 and 14010, respectively.

Dry plates. (See Films, etc.)

Dry plates, photographic. (See Photographic dry plates.) Dulcit, manufactured by the Midland Manufacturing Company, of New York City, from imported materials. T. D. 27141.

Dust shields fitted and permanently attached to railroad cars, T. D. 23258.

Duty on reimported sugar, manufactured in the United States upon which drawback was paid on exportation. T. D. 27241.

Dyed artificial silk, manufactured from imported artificial silk in the gray, for and on account of the Chardonnet Artificial Silk Company, of New York City. T. D. 26684.

Dyed artificial silk, manufactured by Christopher E. Hertlein, of New York, from imported raw artificial silk. T. D. 26684, extended. T. D. 28527.

Dyed artificial silk, manufactured by S. A. Salvage, Brooklyn, N.Y. T. D. 29641.

Dyed artificial silk, and imitation horsehair, manufactured for Ludwig Littauer, New York. T. D. 29782.

Dyed burlaps, manufactured by the Root & McBride Company, of Cleveland, Ohio. T. D. 23330.

Dyed cotton yarns.

cotton yarns.)

(See Mercerized or mercerized and dyed

T.

Dyed fur skins, manufactured by Herman F. Bindseil, of New York, N. Y., wholly from imported furs dressed on the skin. D. 22446.

Dyed silks. (See Silks, printed and dyed.)

Dyed silks, manufactured from pongee silks, imported "in the white" or "in the gray," or from imported "Habutai" silks; base allowance on quantity of imported silks used, equal to the number of yards of the exported article, to be determined by the inspecting officer, who shall take samples as ordered by the collector, for use as in case of printed silks, which see.

Dyed skins and fur linings, manufactured by Eisenbach Bros. & Co., of New York City, with the use of imported fur skins and linings. T. D. 22446, extended. T. D. 26907.

Dyed skins, manufactured by Herman F. Bendsell, of New York City, with the use of imported skins. T. D. 22446, extended. T. D. 27078.

Dyes, manufactured in part from imported coal-tar products by the New York and Boston Dyewood Company, of New York, N.Y. T. D. 23903.

Dyes: Department instructions, T. D. 23903, extended to dyes, manufactured by John J. Keller & Co. (Incorporated), of New York, N. Y. T. D. 24108.

Dyes of various kinds and descriptions, manufactured in part from imported coal-tar products by H. A. Metz & Co. (Inc.), of New York, N.Y. T. D. 24695.

Dynamite and other explosives, in the manufacture of which all the glycerin used was imported; base allowance on a quantity of glycerin so used, to be determined by allowing 46 2-10

(Note. Accuracy and precision in customs proceedings are so essential to the interests of importers that the services of a competent broker are usually worth vastly more than the small cost or such services.)

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