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100. Wrought-iron railroad-chairs, and wrought-iron nuts and washers, ready punched: two cents per pound.

101. Bed-screws and wrought-iron hinges: two cents and a half per pound.

102. Wrought board-nails, spikes, rivets, and bolts: two and one-half cents per pound.

103. Steam, gas, and water tubes and flues of wrought-iron: three and a half cents per pound.

104. Cut nails and spikes: one and

half cents per pound.

105. Horseshoe nails: five cents per pound.

106. Cut tacks, brads, or sprigs, not exceeding sixteen ounces to the thousand: two and one-half cents per thousand; exceeding sixteen ounces to the thousand: three cents per pound.

107. Screws, commonly called wood-screws, two inches or over in length: eight cents per pound; less than two inches in length: eleven cents per pound.

108. Screws of any other metal than iron, and all other screws of iron, except wood-screws: thirty-five per centum ad valorem.

109. Vessels of cast iron not otherwise provided for, and on andirons, sadirons, tailors' and hatters' irons, stoves and stove plates, of cast iron: one and one-half cents per pound.

110. Cast-iron, steam, gas, and water pipe: one and one-half cents per pound.

111. Cast-iron butts and hinges: two and a half cents per pound. 112. Hollow ware, glazed or tinned: three and one-half cents per pound.

113. Cast scrap-iron of every description: six dollars per ton.

114. Wrought scrap-iron of every description: eight dollars per ton. But nothing shall be deemed scrap-iron except waste or refuse iron that has been in actual use, and is fit only to be remanufactured.

115. All other castings of iron, not otherwise provided for: thirty per centum ad valorem.

116. Taggers' iron: thirty per centum ad valorem.

117. Steel, in ingots, bars, coils, sheets, and steel wire, not less than one-fourth of one inch in diameter, valued at seven cents per pound or less: two cents and one-fourth per pound; valued at above seven cents and not above eleven cents per pound: three cents per pound; valued at above eleven cents per pound: three cents and a half per pound, and ten per centum ad valorem.

118. Steel wire less than one-fourth of an inch in diameter and not less than number sixteen, wire-gauge: two and one-half cents per pound, and in addition thereto twenty per centum ad valorem; less or finer than number sixteen, wire-gauge: three cents per pound, and in addition thereto twenty per centum ad valorem.

119. Steel, commercially known as crinoline, corset, and hat steel wire nine cents per pound and ten per centum ad valorem.

120. Steel, in any form, not otherwise provided for: thirty per centum ad valorem: Provided, That no allowance or reduction of duties for partial loss or damage shall be hereafter made in consequence of rust of iron or steel or upon the manufactures of iron or steel, except on polished Russia sheet-iron.

121. Cross-cut saws: ten cents per lineal foot.

122. On mill, pit, and drag saws, not over nine inches wide: twelve and a half cents per lineal foot; over nine inches wide: twenty cents per lineal foot.

123. Lead in sheets, pipes, or shot: two and three-quarter cents per pound.

124. Lead ore: one and a half cents per pound.

125. Lead in pigs and bars: two cents per pound.

126. Old scrap-lead, fit only to be remanufactured: one and one-half cents per pound.

127. Zinc, spelter, or tutenegue, manufactured in blocks or pigs: one and one-half cents per pound.

128. Zinc, spelter, tutenegue in sheets: two and one-quarter cents per pound.

129. [On tin in plates or sheets and on terne and tagger's tin, one and one-tenth cents per pound. Act of February 8, 1875, sec. 4.]

130. Iron and tin plates galvanized or coated with any metal by electric batteries: two cents per pound.

131. Iron and tin plates galvanized or coated with any metal otherwise than by electric batteries: two and one-half cents per pound.

132. Copper imported in the form of ores: three cents on each pound of fine copper contained therein.

133. Regulus of copper, and on all black or coarse copper: four cents on each pound of fine copper contained therein.

134. Old copper, fit only for remanufacture: four cents per pound. 135. Copper in plates, bars, ingots, pigs, and in other forms not manufactured or here enumerated: five cents per pound.

136. Copper in rolled plates called braziers' copper, sheets, rods, pipes, and copper bottoms, and all manufactures of copper, or of which copper shall be a component of chief value, not otherwise provided for: fortyfive per centum ad valorem.

137. Sheathing or yellow metal not wholly of copper, nor wholly nor in part of iron, ungalvanized, in sheets forty-eight inches long and fourteen inches wide, and weighing from fourteen to thirty-four ounces per square foot: three cents per pound.

[a. Yellow sheathing-metal and yellow-metal bolts, of which the component part of chief value is copper, shall be deemed manufactures of copper, and shall pay the duty now provided by law for manufactures of copper, and shall be entitled to the drawback allowed by law to copper and composition metal whenever the same shall be used in the construction or equipment or repair of vessels built in the United States for the purpose of being employed in the foreign trade, including the trade between the Atlantic and Pacific ports of the United States. Act of February 8, 1875, sec. 5.]

138. Nickel: thirty cents per pound.

139. Nickel oxide and alloy of nickel with copper: twenty cents per pound.

140. Gold-leaf: one dollar and fifty cents per package of five hundred leaves; silver-leaf: seventy-five cents per package of five hundred leaves.

141. Argentine, alabatta, or German silver, unmanufactured: thirtyfive per centum ad valorem.

142. Brass in bars or pigs; and old brass, fit only to be remanufactured: fifteen per centum ad valorem.

143. Dutch and bronze metal in leaf: ten per centum ad valorem. 144. Articles not otherwise provided for, made of gold, silver, German silver, or platina, or of which either of these metals shall be a component part: forty per centum ad valorem.

145. Silver-plated metal, in sheets or other form: thirty-five per centum ad valorem.

146. Manufactures, articles, vessels, and wares not otherwise provided for, of brass, iron, lead, pewter and tin or other metal, (except gold, silver, platina, copper, and steel,) or of which either of these metals shall be the component material of chief value: thirty-five per centum ad valorem.

[a. Cans or packages made of tin or other material containing fish of any kind admitted free of duty under any existing law or treaty, not exceeding one quart in contents, shall be subject to a duty of one cent and a half on each can or package; and when exceeding one quart, shall be subject to an additional duty of one cent and a half for each additional quart, or fractional part thereof. Act of February 8, 1875, sec. 4.]

147. Metals, unmanufactured, not otherwise provided for: twenty per centum ad valorem.

SCHEDULE F.-PROVISIONS.

148. Beef and pork: one cent per pound. 149. Hams and bacon: two cents per pound. 150. Cheese: four cents per pound.

151. Wheat: twenty cents per bushel. 152. Butter: four cents per pound.

153. Lard: two cents per pound.

154. Rye and barley: fifteen cents per bushel. 155. Indian corn or maize: ten cents per bushel. 156. Oats: ten cents per bushel.

157. Fish: mackerel, two dollars per barrel; herrings, pickled or salted, one dollar per barrel; pickled salmon, three dollars per barrel; all other fish pickled, in barrels, one dollar and fifty cents per barrel; all other foreign-caught fish imported otherwise than in barrels or halfbarrels, or whether fresh, smoked, or dried, salted or pickled, not otherwise provided for, fifty cents per one hundred pounds.

158. Salmon, preserved: thirty per centum ad valorem.

159. [On anchovies and sardines, packed in oil or otherwise, in tin boxes, fifteen cents per whole box, measuring not more than five inches long, four inches wide, and three and one-half inches deep; seven and one-half cents for each half-box, measuring not more than five inches long, four inches wide, and one and five-eighths inches deep; and four cents for each quarter box, measuring not more than four inches and three-quarters long, three and one-half inches wide, and one and onehalf inches deep; when imported in any other form, sixty per centum ad valorem : Act of February 8, 1875, sec. 4.]

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160. Fish preserved in oil, except anchovies and sardines: thirty per centum ad valorem.

161. Corn-meal: ten per centum ad valorem. 162. Oat-meal: one-half cent per pound.

163. Rye-flour: ten per centum ad valorem.

164. Rice: cleaned, two and a half cents per pound; on uncleaned, two cents per pound.

165. On paddy: one cent and one-half per pound.

166. Capers, pickles, and sauces of all kinds, not otherwise provided for: thirty-five per centum ad valorem.

167. Catsup: forty per centum ad valorem.

168. Preserved or condensed milk: twenty per centum ad valorem. 169. Potatoes: fifteen cents per bushel.

170. Vegetables, not otherwise provided for: ten per centum ad valo

rem.

171. Prepared vegetables, meats, fish, poultry, and game, sealed or unsealed, in cans or otherwise: thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 172. Vinegar: ten cents per gallon.

SCHEDULE G.—SUGARS.

173. Sugar not above number seven, Dutch standard in color: one and three-quarter cents per pound.

174. Sugar above number seven, and not above number ten, Dutch standard in color: two cents per pound.

175. Sugar above number ten, and not above number thirteen, Dutch standard in color: two and one-quarter cents per pound.

176. Sugar above number thirteen, and not above number sixteen, Dutch standard in color: two and three quarters cents per pound. 177. Sugar above number sixteen, and not above number twenty, Dutch standard in color: three and one-quarter cents per pound.

178. Sugar above number twenty, Dutch standard in color, and on all refined loaf, lump, crushed, powdered, and granulated sugar: four cents per pound. But sirup of sugar, sirup of sugar-cane juice, melado, concentrated melado, or concentrated molasses, entered under the name of molasses, shall be forfeited to the United States.

179. Sugar-candy, not colored: ten cents per pound.

180. All other confectionery, not otherwise provided for, made wholly or in part of sugar, and on sugars, after being refined, when tinctured, colored, or in any way adulterated, valued at thirty cents per pound or less: fifteen cents per pound.

181. Confectionery valued above thirty cents per pound, or when sold by the box, package, or otherwise than by the pound: fifty per centum ad valorem.

182, 183. [On all molasses, concentrated molasses, tank-bottoms, syrup of sugar cane juice, melada, and on sugars according to the Dutch standard in color, imported from foreign countries, there shall be levied, collected and paid, in addition to the duties now imposed in Schedule G, section two thousand five hundred and four of the Revised Statutes, an amount equal to twenty-five per centum of said duties as levied upon the several articles and grades therein designated: Provided, That concentrated melada, or concrete, shall hereafter be classed as sugar dutiable according to color by the Dutch standard: and melada shall be known and defined as an article made in the process of sugar-making, being the cane-juice boiled down to the sugar point and containing all the sugar and molasses resulting from the boiling-process and without any process of purging or clarification, and any and all products of the sugarcane imported in bags, mats, baskets or other than tight packages shall be considered sugar and dutiable as such. And provided further, That of the drawback on refined sugars exported allowed by section three thousand and nineteen of the Revised Statutes of the United States, only one per centum of the amount so allowed shall be retained by the United States. Act of March 3, 1875, sec. 3.]

SCHEDULE H.-SILKS AND SILK GOODS.

184. Silk in the gum not more advanced than singles, tram, and thrown or organzine: thirty-five per centum ad valorem. (See 192.)

185. Spun silk for filling in skeins or cops: thirty-five per centum ad valorem. (See 192.)

186. Floss silks: thirty-five per centum ad valorem. (See 192.)

187. Sewing-silk in the gum or purified: forty per centum ad valorem. (See 192.)

188. Silk twist, twist composed of mohair and silk: forty per centum ad valorem. (See 192.)

189. Dress and piece silks, ribbons, and silk-velvets, or velvets of which silk is the component material of chief value: sixty per centum ad valorem. (See 192.)

190. Silk vestings, pongees, shawls, scarfs, mantillas, pelerines, handkerchiefs, veils, laces, shirts, drawers, bonnets, hats, caps, turbans, chemisettes, hose, mits, aprons, stockings, gloves, suspenders, watchchains, webbing, braids, fringes, galloons, tassels, cords, and trimmings, and ready-made clothing of silk, or of which silk is a component material of chief value: sixty per centum ad valorem. (See 192.)

191. Buttons and ornaments for dresses and outside garments made of silk, or of which silk is the component material of chief value, and containing no wool, worsted, or goats' hair: fifty per centum ad valorem. (See 192.)

192. Manufactures of silk, or of which silk is the component material of chief value, not otherwise provided for: fifty per centum ad valorem. [On spun silk for filling, in skeins or cops, thirty-five per centum ad valorem; on silk in the gum, not more advanced than singles, tram, and thrown or organzine, thirty-five per centum ad valorem; on floss-silks, thirty-five per centum ad valorem; on sewing-silk, in the gum or purified, forty per centum ad valorem.

On lastings, mohair cloth, silk twist, or other manufactures of cloth, woven or made in patterns of such size, shape, or form, or cut in such manner as to be fit for buttons exclusively, ten per centum ad valorem ;

On all goods, wares, and merchandise not otherwise herein provided for, made of silk, or of which silk is the component material of chief value, irrespective of the classification thereof for duty by or under previous laws, or of their commercial designation, sixty per centum ad valorem :

Provided, That this act shall not apply to goods, wares, or merchandise which have, as a component material thereof, twenty-five per centum or over in value of cotton, flax, wool, or worsted. Act of February 8, 1875, sec. 1.]

SCHEDULE I.-SPICES.

193. Pimento and black, white, and red or cayenne pepper: five cents per pound.

194. Ground pimento and ground pepper of all kinds: ten cents per pound.

195. Cinnamon: twenty cents per pound. 196. Mace: twenty-five cents per pound. 197. Nutmegs: twenty cents per pound.

198. Cloves: five cents per pound.

199. Clove-stems: three cents per pound.

200. Cassia and cassia vera: ten cents per pound.

201. Cassia buds and ground cassia: twenty cents per pound.

202. All other spices: twenty cents per pound; ground or prepared : thirty cents per pound.

203. Ginger, ground: three cents per pound.

204. Ginger, preserved or pickled: thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 205. Essence of ginger: thirty-five per centum ad valorem.

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