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SCHEDULE A. GOODS SUBJECT TO DUTIES-Continued.

Jewelry and material therefor, etc.—Continued.

351. Fancy writing desks, fancy cases for jewelry, watches, silverware, plated ware and cutlery; glove, handkerchief, and collar boxes or cases, brush or toilet cases, and all fancy cases for similar fancy articles, of any material; fans, dolls, and toys of all kinds; ornaments of alabaster, spar, amber, terra cotta, or composition; statuettes and bead ornaments, n. e. s., 35 per cent ad valorem.

352. Gold, silver, and aluminum leaf, Dutch or schlag metal leaf; brocade and bronze powders and gold liquid paint, 25 per cent ad valorem.

Minerals.

353. Asbestus in any form other than crude, and all manufactures thereof, 25 per cent ad

valorem.

354. Plumbago, not ground or otherwise manufactured. 10 per cent ad valorem.

355. Plumbago, ground, and manufactures of, n. e. s., and foundry facings of all kinds, 25 percent ad valorem.

Musical instruments.

356. Pianofortes, organs, and musical instruments of all kinds, 30 per cent ad valorem. 357. Brass band instruments, parts of pianofortes and parts of organs, 25 per cent ad valorem. Provided that musical instrument cases shall be dutiable at the same rate as their contents when imported containing the instruments.

Textiles, hats, furs, etc.

358. Cotton batts, batting and sheet wadding, cotton warps and cotton yarns, dyed or not, n. e. s., 25 per cent ad valorem.

359. Cotton fabrics, white or gray, bleached or unbleached, n. o. p., 25 per cent ad valorem. 360. Cotton fabrics, printed, dyed or colored, n. o. p., 35 per cent ad valorem.

361. Damask of linen, stair linen, diaper, napkins, doilies, table and tray cloths, sheets, quilts, towels, and like articles of linen or cotton, or of linen and cotton combined, made up or not, n. o. p., 30 per cent ad valorem.

362. Embroideries, n. e. s., laces, braids, fringes, cords, elastic, round or flat; garter elastic, tassels and bracelets. n. o. p., braids, chains, cords, or other manufactures of hair, n. e. s; handkerchiefs of all kinds; lace collars and all similar lace goods; lace nets and nettings of cotton, linen, silk, or other material; shams, curtains, when made up, trimmed or untrimmed; regalia, badges, and belts of all kinds, n. o. p.; linen, silk, and cotton clothing, and all other articles made up by the seamstress from linen or cotton fabrics, n. o. p.; corsets of all kinds, corset clasps, busks, blanks, and steels, and covered corset wires, cut to length, tipped or untipped, 35 per cent ad valorem.

363. White cotton embroideries, 25 per cent ad valorem.

364 Jeans, sateens, and coutils, when imported by corset and dress stay makers for use in the manufacture of such articles in their own factories, 20 per cent ad valorem.

365. Collars and cuffs of cotton, linen, xylonite, xyolite or celluloid, 35 per cent ad valorem. 366. Shirts of any material, and ladies' or misses' blouses and shirt waists, 35 per cent ad

valorem.

367. Crapes, black, 20 per cent ad valorem.

363 Velvets, velveteens, silk velvets, plush and silk fabrics, 30 per cent ad valorem.

369. Ribbons of all kinds and materials, and manufactures of silk or of which silk is the com. ponent part of chief value, n. e. s., 35 per cent ad valorem.

370. Cotten sewing thread in hanks, three and six cord, 15 per cent ad valorem.

371. Cotton sewing thread and crochet cotton, on spools or tubes or in balls, and all other cotton thread, n. e. s., 25 per cent ad valorem.

372. Silk in the gum, or spun, not more advanced than singles, tram and thrown organzine, not colored, 15 per cent ad valorem.

373. Sewing and embroidery silk and silk twist, 25 per cent ad valorem.

374. Jute cloth, uncolored, not otherwise finished than bleached or calendered, 10 per cent ad valorem.

375. Horse clothing of jute, shaped or otherwise manufactured, 30 per cent ad valorem.

376. All manufactures of hemp, flax, or jute, n. e. s., or of flax, hemp, and jute combined, 25 per cent ad valorem.

377. Bags or sacks of hemp, linen, or jute, and cotton seamless bags, 20 per cent ad valorem. 378. Felt, pressed, of all kinds, not filled or covered by or with any woven fabric, 20 per cent ad valorem.

379. Haircloth of all kinds, 30 per cent ad valorem.

380. Sails for boats and ships, 25 per cent ad valorem.

381. Cloths, not rubbered or made waterproof, whether of wool, cotton, unions, silk, or ramie, 60 inches or over in width, and weighing not more than 7 ounces to the square yard, when imported exclusively for the manufacture of mackintosh clothing, under regulations to be adopted by the governor in council, 15 per cent ad valorem.

382. Featherbone, plain or covered, in coils, 20 per cent ad valorem.

383. Stockinettes for the manufacture of rubber boots and shoes, when imported by manufac turers of rubber boots and shoes, for use exclusively in the manufacture thereof in their own factories, 15 per cent ad valorem.

384. Cotton duck, gray or white, n. e. s., 223 per cent ad valorem.

385 Oiled silk and oiled cloth, and tape or other textile india rubbered, flocked, or coated, n. o. p., 30 per cent ad valorem.

386. Women's and children's dress goods, coat linings, Italian cloths, alpacas, orleans, cashmeres, henriettas, serges, buntings, nun's cloth, bengalines, whip cords, twills, plains, or jacquards of similar fabrics, composed wholly or in part of wool, worsted, the hair of the camel, alpaca, goat, or like animal, not exceeding in weight 6 ounces to the square yard, when imported in the gray or unfinished state for the purpose of being dyed or finished in Canada, under such regulations as are established by the governor in council, 25 per cent ad valorem.

1 Cotton yarn, polished or glossed, imported by manufacturers of shoe laces, free.

SCHEDULE A.-GOODS SUBJECT TO DUTIES-Continued.

Textiles, hats, furs, etc.-Continued.

387. Socks and stockings of all kinds, 35 per cent ad valorem.

388. Knitted goods, n. e. s., undershirts and drawers, and hosiery of all kinds, n. e. s., 35 per
cent ad valorem.
389. Shawls of all kinds; railway or traveling rugs and lap dusters of all kinds, 30 per cent ad
valorem.

390. Wool, viz: Leicester, Cotswold, Lincolnshire, Southdown combing wools, or wools known
as luster wools and other like combing wools, such as are grown in Canada... per pound..
391. Worsted tops made from such wools as are mentioned in the next preceding item, 15 per
cent ad valorem.

392. Yarns, woolen and worsted, n. e. s., 30 per cent ad valorem.

393. Yarns composed wholly or in part of wool, worsted, the hair of the alpaca, goat, or like animal, costing 30 cents per pound and over, when imported on the cop or tube or in the hank by manufacturers of woolen goods for use in their products, 20 per cent ad valorem. 394. Fabrics. manufactures, wearing apparel, and ready-made clothing composed wholly or in part of wool, worsted, the hair of the alpaca, goat, or other like animal, n. e. s.; blankets, bed comforters, or counterpanes, flannels, cloths, doeskins, cassimeres, tweeds, coatings, overcoatings, and felt cloth, n. e. s., 35 per cent ad valorem.

395. Mats, door or carriage, n. e. s., 35 per cent ad valorem.

396. Carpeting, rugs, mats, and matting of cocoa, straw, hemp, or jute; carpet linings and stair pads, 25 per cent ad valorem.

397. Turkish or imitation Turkish or other rugs or carpets, and carpets n. e. s., 35 per cent ad valorem.

398. Enameled carriage, floor, shelf, and table oilcloth, linoleum, and cork matting or carpets, 30 per cent ad valorem.

399. Window shades in the piece or cut and hemmed or mounted on rollers, n. e. s., 35 per cent ad valorem.

400. Webbing, elastic and nonelastic, 20 per cent ad valorem.

401. Umbrellas, parasols, and sunshades of all kinds and materials, 35 per cent ad valorem. 402. Gloves and mitts of all kinds, 35 per cent ad valorem.

403. Hats, caps, and bonnets, n. e. s.. and hat, cap, and bonnet shapes, 30 per cent ad valorem.

404. Braces or suspenders, and metal parts thereof, 35 per cent ad valorem.

405. Boot, shoe, and stay laces, of any material, 30 per cent ad valorem.

406. Fur skins, wholly or partially dressed, 15 per cent ad valorem.

407. Caps, hats, mutis, tippets, capes, coats, cloaks, and other manufactures of fur, n. o. p., 30 per cent ad valorem.

408. Church vestments of any material, 20 per cent ad valorem.

Sundries.

409. Ships and other vessels built in any foreign country, whether steam or sailing vessels, on
application for Canadian register, on the fair market value of the hull, rigging, machin-
ery, and all appurtenances: On the hull, rigging, and all appurtenances, except machinery,
10 per cent ad valorem; on the boilers, steam engines, and other machinery, 25 per cent
ad valorem.

410. Canoes, skiffs, or open pleasure sailboats, of any material, 25 per cent ad valorem.
411. Canvas, and sail twine of hemp and flax, when to be used for boats' and ships' sails, 5 per
cent ad valorem.

412. Blasting and mining powder

413. Cannon, musket, rifle, gun, and sporting powder and canister powder.

414. Nitroglycerin, giant powder, nitro and other explosives...

$0.03

...per pound.. .............per pound.. .per pound..

.02

.03

.03

415. Glycerin, when imported by manufacturers of explosives for use in the manufacture thereof in their own factories, 10 per cent ad valorem.

416. Torpedoes, firecrackers, and fireworks of all kinds, 25 per cent ad valorem.

417. Fertilizers, compounded or manufactured, 10 per cent ad valorem.

418. Lamp wicks, 25 per cent ad valorem.

419. Photographic dry plates, 30 per cent ad valorem.

420. Emery wheels, and manufactures of emery, 25 per cent ad valorem.

421. Lead pencils, pens, penholders, and rulers of all kinds, 25 per cent ad valorem.

422. Magic lanterns and slides therefor, philosophical, photographic, mathematical, and optical
instruments, n. e. s., cyclometers and pedometers, and tapelines of any material, 25 per
cent ad valorem.

423. Tobacco pipes of all kinds, pipe mounts, cigar and cigarette cases, cigar and cigarette hold-
ers and cases for the same, smokers' sets and cases therefor, and tobacco pouches, 35 per
cent ad valorem.
424. Trunks, valises, hatboxes, carpetbags, tool bags or baskets, satchels, reticules, musical-
instrument cases, purses, portmanteaus, pocketbooks, fly books, and parts thereof, n. o. p.,
and baskets of all kinds, 30 per cent ad valorem.

425. Frames, clasps, and fasteners for purses and chatelaine bags or reticules not more than 7
inches in width, when imported by manufacturers of purses and chatelaine bags or reti-
cules for use in the manufacture thereof in their own factories, 20 per cent ad valorem.
426. Buttons, viz: Pantaloon buttons wholly of metal, and shoe buttons, n. e. s., 25 per cent ad
valorem.

Buttons of all kinds, covered or not, n. o. p., including recognition buttons, and cuff or collar buttons (not being jewelry), 35 per cent ad valorem.

427. Combs for dress and toilet, including mane combs, of all kinds, 35 per cent ad valorem. 428. Brushes of all kinds, 25 per cent ad valorem.

429. Hair, curled or dyed, 20 per cent ad valorem.

430. Artificial flowers, 25 per cent ad valorem.

431. Twine and cordage of all kinds, n. e. s., 25 per cent ad valorem.

432. Rove, when imported for the manufacture of twine for harvest binders, 5 per cent ad valorem.
433. Binders' twine or twine for harvest binders of hemp, jute, manila or sisal, and of manila
and sisal mixed, 10 per cent ad valorem until 1st January, 1898; thereafter to be free.
434. Hammocks, lawn-tennis nets, sportsmen's fish nets, and other articles manufactured of
twine, n. o. p., 30 per cent ad valorem.

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SCHEDULE A. GOODS SUBJECT TO DUTIES-Continued.

Sundries-Continued.

435,436. All sugar above No. 16 Dutch standard in color, and all refined sugars of whatsoever kinds, grades, or standards, testing not more than 88° by the polariscope, $1 08 per 100 pounds, and for each additional degree 13 cents per 100 pounds. Fractions of fivetenths of a degree or less not to be subject to duty, and fractions of more than fivetenths to be dutiable as a degree.

Sugar, not elsewhere specified not above No. 16 Dutch standard in color, sugar drainings or pumpings drained in transit, melado or concentrated melado, tank bottoms and sugar concrete testing not more than 750 by the polariscope, 40 cents per 100 pounds, and for each additional degree 13 cents per 100 pounds. Fractions of five. tenths of a degree or less not to be subject to duty, and fractions of more than fivetenths to be dutiable as a degree. The usual packages in which imported to be free. 437. Glucose or grape sugar, glucose sirup and corn sirup, or any sirups containing any admixture thereof.. ..per pound.. $0.003 438. Sugar candy, brown or white, and confectionery, including sweetened gums, candied peel, and pop corn....

And 35 per cent ad valorem.

.per pound..

439. Maple sugar and maple sirup, 20 per cent ad valorem.
440. Sirup and molasses of all kinds, n. o. p., the product of the sugar cane or beet, n. e. s., and all
imitations thereof or substitutes therefor......
...per pound..
441. Molasses produced in process of the manufacture of cane sugar from the juice of the cane
without any admixture with any other ingredient, when imported in the original pack-
age in which it was placed at the point of production and not afterwards subjected to
any process of treating or mixing, the package in which imported, when of wood, to be
free-

(a) Testing by polariscope 40° or over

per gallon..
.....do....

(b) When testing by polariscope less than 40° and not less than 35°.
And in addition thereto 1 cent per gallon for each degree or fraction of a degree
less than 40°.

Tobacco and manufactures of.

442. Cigars and cigarettes, the weight of the cigarettes to include the weight of the paper covering..

And 25 per cent ad valorem.

443. Cut tobacco..

444. Manufactured tobacco, n. e. s., and snuff.

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003

.012

.013

per pound.. 3.00

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445. Foreign leaf raw tobacco, unstemmed, unmanufactured, for excise purposes, under con.
ditions of the inland revenue act, after June 30, 1897, to be computed on the weight
when ex-warehoused...
per pound..
446. Foreign raw leaf tobacco, stemmed, unmanufactured, for excise purposes, under condi
tions of the inland revenue act, after June 30, 1897, to be computed on the weight when
ex-warehoused...
...per pound..

Unenumerated goods.

447. All goods not enumerated in this act as subject to any other rate of duty, nor declared free of duty by this act, and not being goods the importation whereof is by this act or any other act prohibited, shall be subject to a duty of 20 per cent ad valorem.

SCHEDULE B.-FREE GOODS.

448. Articles for the use of the Governor-General.

.10

.14

449. Articles when imported by and for the use of the army and navy, viz: Arms, military or naval clothing, musical instruments for bands, military stores and munitions of war; also articles consigned direct to officers and men on board vessels of Her Majesty's navy, for their own personal use or consumption.

450. Articles imported by or for the use of the Dominion government, or of any of the departments thereof, or by and for the senate or house of commons, including the following articles when imported by the said government or through any of the departments thereof for the use of the Canadian militia: Military clothing, musical instruments for military bands, military stores, and munitions of war.

451. Articles for the personal or official use of consuls-general who are natives or citizens of the country they represent and who are not engaged in any other business or profession.

452. Travelers' baggage, under regulations prescribed by the controller of customs.

453. Carriages for travelers and carriages laden with merchandise, and not to include circus troupes or hawkers, under regulations prescribed by the controller of customs.

454. Apparel, wearing and other personal and household effects, not merchandise, of British subjects dying abroad, but domiciled in Canada; books, pictures, family plate or furniture, personal effects, and heirlooms left by bequest.

455. Settlers' effects, viz: Wearing apparel, household furniture, books, implements and tools of trade, occupation, or employment; guns, musical instruments, domestic sewing machines, type. writers, live stock, bicycles, carts, and other vehicles and agricultural implements in use by the settler for at least six months before his removal to Canada, not to include machinery, or articles imported for use in any manufacturing establishment, or for sale; provided that any dutiable article entered as settlers' effects may not be so entered unless brought with the settler on his first arrival, and shall not be sold or otherwise disposed of without payment of duty until after twelve months' actual use in Canada; provided also, that under regulations made by the controller of customs, live stock, when imported into Manitoba or the Northwest Territories by intending settlers, shall be free until otherwise ordered by the governor in council. 456. Animals and articles brought into Canada temporarily and for a period not exceeding three months, for the purpose of exhibition or of competition for prizes offered by any agricultural or other association; (but a bond shall be first given in accordance with regulations prescribed by the controller of customs, with the condition that the full duty to which such animals or arti cles would otherwise be liable shall be paid in case of their sale in Canada, or if not reexported within the time specified in such bond,.

Items 445 and 446 were repealed to take effect July 1, 1898.

SCHEDULE B.-FREE GOODS-Continued.

457. Horses, cattle, sheep, swine, and dogs, for the improvement of stock, under regulations made by the treasury board and approved by the governor in council.

458. Menageries, horses, cattle, carriages and harness of, under regulations prescribed by the controller of customs.

459. Admiralty charts.

470. Typewriters, tablets with movable fixtures, and musical instruments, when imported by and for the use of schools for the blind, and being and remaining the sole property of the governing bodies of the said schools and not of private individuals; the above particulars to be verified by special affidavit on each entry when presented. 461. Globes, geographical, topographical, and astronomical; maps and charts for the use of schools for the blind; pictorial illustrations of insects or similar studies, when imported for the use of colleges, schools, and scientific and literary societies; manuscripts and insurance maps, and album insides of paper. 462. Philosophical instruments and apparatus-that is to say, such as are not manufactured in Canadawhen imported for use in universities, colleges, schools, scientific societies, and public hospitals. 463. Botanical and entomological specimens; mineralogical specimens; skins of birds, and skins of animals not natives of Canada, for taxidermic purposes, not further manufactured than prepared for preservation; fishskins; and anatomical preparations and skeletons or parts thereof; and specimens, models, and wall diagrams for illustration of natural history for universities and public museums. 464. Books, viz: Books on the application of science to industries of all kinds, including books on agriculture, horticulture, forestry, fish and fishing, mining, metallurgy, architecture, electric and other engineering, carpentry, shipbuilding, mechanism, dyeing, bleaching, tanning, weaving, and other mechanic aris, and similar industrial books; also books printed in any language other than the English and French languages, or in any two languages not being English and French, or in any three or more languages; and Bibles, prayer books, psalm and hymn books, religious tracts, and Sunday school lesson pictures. 465. Books, embossed, for the blind, and books for the instruction of the deaf and dumb and blind. 466. Books printed by any government or by any association for the promotion of science or letters, and official annual reports of religious or benevolent associations, and issued in the course of the proceedings of the said associations to their members, and not for the purpose of sale or trade. 467. Books, not printed or reprinted in Canada, which are included and used as text-books in the curriculum of any university, incorporated college, or normal school in Canada; books specially imported for the bona fide use of incorporated mechanics' institutes, public libraries, libraries of universities, colleges and schools, or for the library of any incorporated medical, law, literary, scientific, or art association or society, and being the property of the organized authorities of any incorporated medical, law, literary, scientific, or art association or society, and being the property of the organized authorities of such library, and not in any case the property of individuals, the whole under regulations to be made by the controller of customs, provided that importers of books who have sold the same for the purpose mentioned in this item shall, upon proof of sale and delivery for such purpose, be entitled to a refund of any duty paid thereon. 468. Books, bound or unbound, which have been printed and manufactured more than twelve years. 469. Newspapers, and quarterly, monthly, and semimonthly magazines, and weekly literary papers, unbound; and tailors', milliners', and mantle makers' fashion plates.

470. Paintings in oil or water colors, by artists of well-known merit, or copies of the old masters by such artists; and paintings in oil or water colors, the production of Canadian artists, under regulations to be made by the controller of customs.

471. Clothing and books, donations of, for charitable purposes, and photographs, not exceeding three, sent by friends and not for the purpose of sale.

472. Lifeboats and life-saving apparatus specially imported by societies established to encourage the saving of human life.

473. Coins, cabinets of, collections of medals and of other antiquities, including collections of postage stamps; gold and silver coins, except United States silver coin; medals of gold, silver or copper, and other metallic articles actually bestowed as trophies or prizes and received and accepted as honorary distinctions, and cups or other prizes won in bona fide competitions; and medals comemmorating the diamond jubilee of Her Majesty Queen Victoria, until December 31, 1897, and dies for manufacturing such medals.

474. Locomotive and railway passenger, baggage, and freight cars, being the property of railway companies in the United States, running upon any line of road crossing the frontier, so long as Canadian locomotives and cars are admitted free under similar circumstances into the United States, under regulations prescribed by the controller of customs.

475. Models of inventions and of other improvements in the arts; but no article shall be deemed a model which can be fitted for use.

476. Aluminium in ingots, block or bars, strips, sheets, or plates; alumina and chloride of aluminium, or chloralum, sulphate of alumina, and alum cake; and alum in bulk only, ground or unground. 477. Ambergris; ammonia, sulphate of, sal ammoniac, and nitrate of ammonia; arsenic; bromine, burgundy pitch; cinnabar, cochineal, cyanide of potassium, and cyanogen or compound of bromine and potassium for reducing metals in mining operations; iodine, crude; kryolite or cryolite, mineral; oxalic acid; quinine, salts of; saltpeter; calcareous tufa; alizarin and artificial alizarin; aniline oil, crude; aniline salts and arseniate of aniline; annotto, liquid or solid; aniline dyes and coal tar dyes in bulk or packages of not less than 1 pound weight. 478. Antimony salts; antimony, or regulus of, not ground, pulverized, or otherwise manufactured. 479. Artificial limbs. 480. Asphalt or asphaltum; bone pitch, crude only; and resin or rosin in packages of not less than 100 pounds; and resin oil.

481. Anchors for vessels.

482. Bees.

483. Bells, when imported for the use of churches only.

484. Bismuth, metallic, in its natural state; blood albumen and tannic acid.

485. Blast furnace slag.

486. Blanketing and lapping, and dies or mills for engraving copper rollers, when imported by cotton manufacturers, calico printers, and wall paper manufacturers, for use in their own factories only.

487. Bolting cloth not made up.

488. Bones, crude, not manufactured, burned, calcined, ground, or steamed.

489. Bookbinders' cloth.

SCHEDULE B.-FREE GOODS-Continued.

490. Boracic acid, and borax, ground or unground, in bulk of not less than 25 pounds. 491. Bristles, broom corn, and hair-brush pads.

432. Brass and copper, old and scrap, or in blocks; and brass or copper in bolts, bars, and rods in coil or otherwise, not less than 6 feet in length, unmanufactured, and brass or copper in strips, sheets, or plates not polished, planished, or coated, and brass or copper tubing, in lengths of not less than 6 feet, and not polished, bent, or otherwise manufactured, and copper in ingots or pigs.

493. Britannia metal in pigs, blocks, or bars.

491. Buckram, when imported for the manufacture of hat and bonnet shapes.

495, Bullion, gold and silver, in ingots, blocks, bars, drops, sheets or plates, unmanufacture; gold and silver sweepings, and bullion or gold fringe.

496. Burr stones, in blocks, rough or unmanufactured, not bound up or prepared for binding into

millstones.

497. Caplins, unfinished leghorn hats, and manila hoods.

45. Casts, as models for the use of schools of design.

49. Cane and rattans, not manufactured; osiers or willows, and bamboos, unmanufactured, and bamboo reeds, not further manufactured than cut into suitable lengths for walking sticks or canes, or for sticks for umbrellas, parasols, or sunshades.

500. Catgut or gut cord, for musical instruments; and catgut or worm gut, unmanufactured, for whip and other cord. 501. Celluloid, xylonite or xyolite in sheets, and in lumps, blocks, or balls, in the rough.

502. Chloride of lime, in packages of not less than 25 pounds weight; cobalt, ore of; oxide of cobalt, oxide of tin, and oxide of copper; copper, precipitate of, crude; dragon's blood; gypsum, crude (sulphate of lime); lava, unmanufactured; manganese, oxide of; phosphorus; litlarge; saffron, saffron cake, safflower, and extract of; sulphate of iron (copperas); sulphate of copper (blue vitriol); sulphur and brimstone, crude, or in roll or flour; tartar emetic and gray tartar; cream of tartar in crystals and argal or argols; verdigris, or subacetate of copper, dry; zinc, salts of, and tartaric acid crystals.

503. Chronometers and compasses for ships.

504. Citron, lemon, and orange rinds in brine.

565. Clays, including china clay, fire clay, and pipe clay; gannister and sand.

506. Coal, anthracite and anthracite coal dust; coke.

507. Coal and pine pitch, and coal and pine tar in packages of not less than 15 gallons.

508. Coir and coir yarn; raw cotton or cotton wool; and cotton waste, not dyed, cleaned, bleached, or otherwise manufactured; cotton yarns, No. 40 and finer; and mohair yarns.

509. Communion plate, when imported for the use of churches.

510. Crucibles, clay or plumbago.

511. Curling stones.

512. Cups, brass, being rough blanks for the manufacture of paper shells or cartridges, when imported by manufacturers of brass and paper shells and cartridges, for use in the manufacture of such

articles in their own factories.

51 Diamonds, unset, diamond dust or bort and black, for borers; and diamond drills for prospecting for minerals, not to include motive power.

514. Domestic fowls, pure bred, for the improvement of stock, homing or messenger pigeons, and pheasants and quails.

515. Drugs, crude, such as barks, flowers, roots, beans, berries, balsams, bulbs, fruits, insects, grains, gums and gum resins, herbs, leaves, nuts, fruit and stem seeds-which are not edible and which are in a crude state and not advanced in value by refining or grinding or any other process of manufacture and not otherwise provided for; egg yolk; fuller's earth, in bulk only, not prepared for toilet or other purposes; lead, nitrate and acetate of, not ground; litmus and all fichens, prepared or not prepared; musk, in pods or in grain; roots, medicinal, viz: Alkanet, crude, crushed or ground; aconite, calumba, folia digitalis, gentian, ginseng, jalap, ipecacuanha, iris, orris root, licorice, sarsaparilla, squills, taraxacum, rhubarb and valerian, unground; vaccine and ivory vaccine points; gum chicle or sappato gum, crude; platinum and black oxide of copper, for use in the manufacture of chlorate; potash, chloride of, not farther prepared than ground, and free from admixture with any other substance; and bacteriological products or serum for subcutaneous injection.

516. Duck for belting and hose, when imported by manufacturers of such articles for use in the manufacture thereof in their own factories; and canvas or fabric, not frictionized, for the manufac ture of bicycle tires when imported by the manufacturers of bicycle tires for use exclusively in the manufacture of bicycle tires in their own factories.

517. Dyeing or tanning articles, in a crude state, used in dyeing or tanning, n. e. s.; berries for dyeing or used for composing dyes; turmeric, nutgalls, and extracts thereof; lac, crude, seed, button, stick, and shell; indigo, indigo paste and extracts of, and indigo auxiliary or zine dust; persis, or extract of archil and cudbear; terra japonica, gambier or cutch, extract of logwood, fustic, oak and oak bark and quebracho; camwood and sumac and extract thereof, tanner's bark, hemlock bark and oak bark; ground logwood, ground fustic, patent prepared dyes, and ground oak bark; iron liquor, solutions of acetate or nitrate of iron for dyeing and calico printing, madder and munject, or Indian madder, ground or prepared, and all extracts of; red liquor, a crude acetate of aluminium prepared from pyroligneous acid, for dyeing anu calico printing. 518. Emery in bulk, crushed or ground.

519. Felt, adhesive, for sheathing vessels.

520. Fertilizers, uncompounded or unmanufactured, including phosphate rock, kainite or German rotash salts, German mineral potash, bone dust, bone black or charred bone and bone ash, fish offal or refuse, guano and other animal or vegetable manures.

521. Fiber, Mexican, natural, and tampico or istle and vegetable fibers; fibrilla, flax fiber and flax tow; grass, manila, esparto or Spanish, and other grasses, and pulp of, including fancy grasses, dried but not colored or otherwise manufactured; moss, Iceland, and other mosses, sea grass and seaweed, crude or in their natural state, or cleaned only; and kelp.

522. Fire bricks, for use in processes of manufacture, or for manufacturing purposes.

Consul Brush, of Clifton, under date of March 16, 1899, reports that the chemical compounds known as safety bate and tannin preserver, when imported by tanners to be used exclusively in the tanning of leathers in their own tanneries, may hereafter be brought into Canada free of duty, an order in council having been passed placing them on the free list.

10388-3

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