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Horse leather of every mode of tanning, Oak-wood extract.

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Men's shoes of all kinds weighing over 1,000 Catechu, brown (Bombay, Pegu catechu). g. a pair.

Catechu, yellow (gambier).

Military gloves (brown, gray, lined, Quebracha-wood extract.

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1 Except broadtails, Persians, Schiras, moirē-astrakhan, crude and colored, crude

and colored Crimean lambskins, colored Schmaschen.

2 Except glove leather and patent leather.

8 Cf. Sec. B, No. 40.

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Balls, even those covered with fabrics or Shaving dishes.

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Piston packings of coarse textiles, etc., Ebonite in plates, sticks.

Suspenders.

Horseshoe pads.

Insulating tape.

Rubber solution.

Cushions (air, water cushions).

with rubber, etc.

Compressers.

Card cloths.

Soft rubber spheres.

and rubber solutions.

Penholders and parts thereof. Pens (so-called package pens). Graphophone disks (records). Instruments, as: surgical.

Leather substitutes of vegetable textiles Rubber horn paste, in plates, sticks.

Leather cloth, rubberized.

Okonite tape.

Pedal rubber.

Mouthpieces. Whips.

Phonograph cylinders. Plates.

1 Exportation and transit carriage of gutta-percha paper forbidden.

Raw pressings.

Tubes.

Syringes.

Rods.

Canes.

Tobacco pipestems.

Violin chin rests.

XIII. GOODS OF THE TEXTILE INDUSTRY.

(a) Raw materials and refuse. Refuse from animal and vegetable fibers, not mentioned below, capable of being spun (even silk); of textiles (woolen rags, list; linen, cotton, etc., rags [paper rags], and all other refuse of textiles, etc., used in paper making [old nets], old cordage, old string, weaver's lace of yarn, no longer available for the original purpose). Cotton.

Cotton refuse of all kinds (linters, etc.).
Flax.

Flax oakum, capable of being spun.
Hemp.

Hemp oakum, capable of being spun.
Jute.

Jute oakum, capable of being spun. Camel's hair and alpaca hair (alpaca wool), raw and worked (hackled, bleached, steeped, colored, carded, combed), combings thereof.

Cocoanut fibers.

Artificial cotton.
Artificial wool (shoddy).

Horsehair (from the mane or tail), raw, boiled, of No. 146 of the tari

Waste.

Ramie (China grass), raw, cleaned, steeped,

broken, scutched (ungummed).

Cattle tail hair, raw, unworked.

Wool, even carded or combed.

Jute yarn.

Camel's hair yarn.

Cocoanut fiber yarn.

Linen yarn (yarn from flax or flax oakum). Linen twine (twine from flax yarn or flax

oakum yarn).

Ramie yarn, even mixed with flax or jute, but without admixture of other fibers (except ramie weaving yarn). Woolen yarn (combed yarn or worsted, and carded yarn).

(c) Goods.

Cotton fabrics for articles of equipment (haversacks, tent cloths) as far as these articles are made of yarns from Nos. 6 to 25 (English).

Cotton fabrics, rubberized, for balloon envelopes and aeroplanes.

Blankets, woolen (horse blankets and others).

Drill (brown and gray drill [Manchester or
Genoa cords]) of cotton.
Fishing nets.2

Textiles of all kinds for the manufacture of aircraft (balloons, airships, aeroplanes). Suspenders.

Jute fabrics.

Jute bags, even if they are to be exported

with goods as receptacles thereof.3 "Cartridge bag goods," "powder cloth." Cartridge silk.

Linen and semilinen fabrics (linen and half linen).

Nets for free balloons.

Paper machine felts, woolen.

Crude ramie hose or pieces thereof, loosely

woven or worked, for incandescent-light mantles.

Knapsacks (large, for slinging over shoulder).5

Wool refuse, capable of being spun (comb- Sleeping and traveling coverlets of cotton,

ings, etc.).

Wool dust fertilizer.

Goat hair, raw, unworked.

(b) Spun goods.

Alpaca yarn (yarn from hair of the alpaca). Cotton yarn up to No. 32 English, of one, two, or more threads, twisted once, raw, colored, bleached, printed.1 Binding twine of Manila hemp, sisal hemp,

etc.

Hemp yarn, hemp oakum yarn. Hemp twine.

in finished pieces or by the yard.

Silk fabrics, varnished, for balloon en

velopes and covering aeroplanes.

Fabrics of all kinds made of carded silk yarn (so-called bourette fabrics of silk oakum).

Ropes and cordage of all kinds.

Bandage gauze and other bandage ma-
terials of textiles of all kinds.
Bandages.

Cotton used in dressing wounds.
Tricot and net stuffs, woolen.
Tricot and net goods, woolen.6

1 Except bleached, colored, and printed, in the Lohnveredlungsverkehr, and wire yarn. 2 Except those made of cotton fabrics of No. 30/15 ply English on and finer numbers. Except such as can be proven to have been previously imported into the country to be filled, or whose reimportation after being emptied abroad is guaranteed.

4 Except ribbons, passementerie, lace, shirts, bosoms, removable bosoms, collars, cuffs (men's, women's, and children's linen).

5 See also Sec. B, No. 40.

6 Except women's and children's gloves.

Woolen fabrics weighing over 300 g. to the
square meter of woven surface.1
Cells and cell materials for airships and
balloons.

Tent stuffs.

XIV. PAPER.

Halfstuff (for preparing paper and paste

board), made from refuse from textile fabrics or the like of No. 649 of the tariff. Wood pulp, mechanically prepared (wood paste, ground wood).

Wood pulp, chemically prepared (cellulose).

Newspaper printing paper.

XV. EARTHS, STONES, AND GOODS THERE

FROM.

Asbestos, crude, also ground.

Asbestos paints.

Asbestos fibers.

Asbestos goods, as:

Bags.

Boat coverings.

Washers.

Packing rings.

Wicks, braided or woven.
Filters, filter composition.
Gaiters.

Yarn, string, rope, cord.

Braid, asbestos rubber braid.

Woven work, asbestos rubber texture, not specially mentioned above or below.

Gloves.

Hats.

Boiler revetments.

Clothing.

Klingerite.

Masks.

Mattresses.

Caps.

Packing.

Bauxite, unpurified.

Mica, crude, even in crude plates or disks.
Mica and micanite goods.

Mica plates, cut to shape.
Mica disks, cut to shape.
Graphite of all kinds.2

Lime, natural phosphate of (raw phos-
Refuse from graphite crucibles.
phate, phosphorite, apatite, coprolith,
navassite, sombrerite, Iceland guano).
Fossil dust (infusorial earth).
Magnesite (natural carbonate of magnesia),
even burned (bitter earth, earthy talc).
Magnesite goods (fireproof goods of burned
magnesite of Nos. 724 and 725 of the
tariff, such as nozzles, caps, muffles,
plates, retorts, pipes, crucibles, stones,
cylinders, and others).

Micanite (artificial mica, produced from
mica flakes with an adhesive substance).
Quartzite.

Crucibles of graphite.

Emery, ground.

Emery wheels.

Heavy spar, barite (natural sulfate of barium), even powdered or ground. Bricks, fireproof (fire brick, Dinas brick, silica brick, and other quartz bricks, bauxite, magnesia, and carbon bricks). Alumina for aluminium production.

XVI. WAX, LIGHTS, SOAP, ETC.

Polishing wax, consisting of wax or ceresin with addition of turpentine oil or the like.

Ozocerite, refined, and ceresin in blocks, tablets, or balls; wax tips of purified ozocerite and of ceresin (No. 249 of the tariff).3

Fashioning (modeling) substances of mineral substances, produced with stearin, palmitin, paraffin, wax, or resin.

Paper, pasteboard, undulated paste- Lights (candles) of all kinds, made of wax,

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ceresin, paraffin, stearin, spermaceti, tallow, or the like, except night lights of all kinds.

Polishing stones, artificial (of burned, ground, or washed earths, formed with stearin, tallow, etc.).

Cleaners, made with fats, oils, or soap (cleaning oils, pomades, soaps). Lubricants (except wagon grease), made with fats or oils, liquid or solid, even formed.

Shoe polish (except black, nonliquid), even when made with wax or ceresin.

1 Except floor carpets, closely woven textiles for fitting out furniture and rooms,

velvet and plush, and velvetlike and plushlike fabrics.

2 The exportation and transit carriage of retort graphite is permitted.

3 Exportation only forbidden.

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(Imperial Advertiser No. 98, of Apr. 28, 1915.)

On the basis of §2 of the Imperial Order of July 31, 1914, concerning the embargo on the exportation and transit carriage of arms, ammunition, powder, etc., I hereby bring the following to the public knowledge: The exportation of the following articles is prohibited:

Maps, travelers' guides, and traveling manuals. However, the exportation to neutral countries of maps, travelers' guides, and traveling manuals produced in Germany shall be permitted provided they do not represent or discuss any German, Austrian, or Turkish territory.

BERLIN, April 28, 1915.

DELBRÜCK, Deputy Imperial Chancellor.

SECOND SUPPLEMENT.

[57th proclamation.]

(Imperial Advertiser No. 103, of May 4, 1915.)

On the basis of §2 of the Imperial Orders of July 31, 1914, concerning the embargo (1) on the exportation and transit carriage of arms, ammunition, powder, etc., (2) the exportation and transit carriage of raw materials used in producing and operating munitions of war, and (3) the exportation of motor vehicles and crude mineral oils, anthracite coal tar, and all oils produced therefrom, I hereby bring the following to the public knowledge:

The exportation and transit carriage of the following articles are prohibited:

Steel bottles of all kinds, empty and filled.

Photographic cameras, even without objectives, and of closing mechanisms for photographic objectives.

Signal horns for automobiles.
Kapok.

BERLIN, May 2, 1915.

DELBRÜCK, Deputy Imperial Chancellor.

THIRD SUPPLEMENT.

[58th proclamation.]

(Imperial Advertiser No. 106 of May 7, 1915.)

On the basis of §2 of the Imperial Orders of July 31, 1914, concerning the embargo (1) on the exportation and transit carriage of arms, ammunition, powder, etc., and (2) on the exportation and transit carriage

1 Exportation only forbidden.

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