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or ground in oil or water, twenty-five per centum ad valore 3. Chrome yellow, chrome green, and all other chromium colors

the manufacture of which lead and bichromate of potash soda are used, in pulp, dry, or ground in or mixed with oil water, four and one-half cents per pound.

9. Ocher and ochery earths, sienna and sienna earths, and umbe and umber earths, not specially provided for, when crude o not powdered, washed or pulverized, one-eighth of one cen per pound; if powdered, washed or pulverized, three-eighth of one cent per pound; if ground in oil or water, one and one half cents per pound.

0. Orange mineral, three and three-eighths cents per pound. 1. Red lead, two and seven-eighths cents per pound.

2. Ultramarine blue, whether dry, in pulp, or mixed with water and wash blue containing ultramarine, three and three-fourths cents per pound.

3. Varnishes, including so-called gold size or japan, thirty-five per centum ad valorem; spirit varnishes, one dollar and thirtytwo cents per gallon and thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 4. Vermilion red, and other colors containing quicksilver, dry or ground in oil or water, ten cents per pound; when not containing quicksilver but made of lead or containing lead, five cents per pound.

5. White lead, white paint and pigment containing lead, dry or in pulp, or ground or mixed with oil, two and seven-eighths cents per pound.

3. Whiting and Paris white, dry, one-fourth of one cent per pound; ground in oil, or putty, one cent per pound.

7. Zinc, oxide of, and white paint or pigment containing zinc, but not containing lead, dry, one cent per pound; ground in oil, one and three-fourth cents per pound; sulfid of zinc white, or white sulphide of zinc, one and one-fourth cents per pound; chloride of zinc and sulphate of zinc, one cent per pound. 3. All paints, colors, pigments, lakes, crayons, smalts and frostings, whether crude or dry or mixed, or ground with water or oil or with solutions other than oil, not otherwise specially provided for in this Act, thirty per centum ad valorem; all paints, colors and pigments, commonly known as artists' paints or colors, whether in tubes, pans, cakes or other forms, thirty per centum ad valorem. 9. Paris green, and London purple, fifteen per centum ad valorem. 0. Lead: Acetate of, white, three and one-fourth cents per pound; brown, gray, or yellow, two and one-fourth cents per pound; nitrate of, two and one-half cents per pound; litharge, two and three-fourth cents per pound.

1. Phosphorus, eighteen cents per pound.

TASH:

2. Bichromate and chromate of, three cents per pound.

3. Caustic or hydrate of, refined, in sticks or rolls, one cent per pound; chlorate of, two and one-half cents per pound.

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of which alcohol is used, not specially provided for in this fifty-five cents per pound, but in no case shall the sam less than twenty-five per centum ad valorem.

68. Medicinal preparations not containing alcohol or in the pre tion of which alcohol is not used, not specially provided this Act, twenty-five per centum ad valorem; calomel and mercurial medicinal preparations, thirty-five per centu

valorem.

69. Plasters, healing or curative, of all kinds, and court-plaster, t five per centum ad valorem.

70. Preparations used as applications to the hair, mouth, tee skin, such as cosmetics, dentifrices, pastes, pomades, pow and other toilet articles, and articles of perfumery, wheth sachets or otherwise, not containing alcohol or in the mar ture of which alcohol is not used, and not specially pro for in this Act, fifty per centum ad valorem.

71. Santonin, and all salts thereof containing eighty per cent over of santonin, one dollar per pound.

SOAP:

72. Castile soap, one and one-fourth cents per pound; fancy, perfu and all descriptions of toilet soap, including so-called med or medicated soaps, fifteen cents per pound; all other not specially provided for in this Act, twenty per centu valorem.

SODA:

73. Bicarbonate of soda, or supercarbonate of soda, or saleratus other alkalies containing fifty per centum or more of bica ate of soda, three-fourths of one cent per pound.

74. Bichromate and chromate of soda, two cents per pound. 75. Crystal carbonate of soda, or concentrated soda crystal monohydrate, or sesquicarbonate of soda, three-tenths o cent per pound; chlorate of soda two cents per pound. 76. Hydrate of, or caustic soda, three-fourths of one cent per p nitrite of soda, two and one-half cents per pound; hypo-sul and sulphide of soda, one-half of one cent per pound. 77. Sal soda, or soda crystals, not concentrated, two-tenths o cent per pound.

78. Soda ash, three eighths of one cent per pound; arseniate of one and one-fourth cents per pound.

79. Silicate of soda, or other alkaline silicate, one-half of one cer pound.

80. Sulphate of soda, or salt cake, or niter cake, one dollar and tw five cents per ton.

81. Sea moss, ten per centum ad valorem.

82. Sponges, twenty per centum ad valorem; manufactures of spo or of which sponge is the component material of chief value, not spe provided for in this Act, forty per centum ad valorem.

CK AND TILE:

. Fire-brick, weighing not more than ten pounds each, not glaze enameled, ornamented, or decorated in any manner, one doll: and twenty-five cents per ton; glazed, enameled, ornamente or decorated, forty-five per centum ad valorem; brick, othe than fire-brick, not glazed, enameled, painted, vitrified, orn mented, or decorated in any manner, twenty-five per centur ad valorem; if glazed, enameled, painted, vitrified, orna mented, or decorated in any manner, forty-five per centum a valorem.

Tiles, plain unglazed, one color, exceeding two square inches in size, four cents per square foot; glazed, encaustic, cerami mosaic, vitrified, semi-vitrified, flint, spar, embossed, enameled ornamental, hand painted, gold decorated, and all other earthenware tiles, valued at not exceeding forty cents per square foot, eight cents per square foot; exceeding forty cents per square foot, ten cents per square foot and twenty-five per centum ad valorem.

ENT, LIME, AND PLASTER:

Roman, Portland, and other hydraulic cement, in barrels, sacks, or other packages, eight cents per one hundred pounds, includ ing weight of barrel or package; in bulk, seven cents per one hundred pounds; other cement, twenty per centum ad valorem. Lime, five cents per one hundred pounds, including weight of barrel or package.

Plaster rock or gypsum, crude, fifty cents per ton; if ground or calcined, two dollars and twenty-five cents per ton; pearl hardening for paper makers' use, twenty per centum ad valorem.

Pumice stone, wholly or partially manufactured, six dollars per ton; unmanufactured, fifteen per centum ad valorem.

YS OR EARTHS:

Clays or earths, unwrought or unmanufactured, not specially provided for in this Act, one dollar per ton; wrought or manufactured, not specially provided for in this Act, two dollars per ton; china clay or kaolin, two dollars and fifty cents per ton; limestone rock asphalt containing not more than fifteen per centum of bitumen, fifty cents per ton; asphaltum and bitumen, not specially provided for in this Act, crude, if not dried, or otherwise advanced in any manner, one dollar and fifty cents per ton; if dried or otherwise advanced in any manner, three dollars per ton; bauxite, or beauxite, crude, not refined or otherwise advanced in condition from its natural state, one dollar per ton; fullers' earth, unwrought and unmanufactured, one dollar and fifty cents per ton; wrought or manufactured, three dollars per ton.

ware, including clock cases with or without movements, p ornaments, toys, toy tea sets, charms, vases and stat painted, tinted, stained, enameled, printed, gilded, or oth decorated or ornamented in any manner, sixty per cen valorem; if plain white and without superadded orna tion of any kind, fifty-five per centum ad valorem. 96. All other china, porcelain, parian, bisque, earthen, sto crockery ware, and manufactures thereof, or of whi same is the component material of chief value, by wł name known, not specially provided for in this Act, if p tinted, stained, enameled, printed, gilded, or otherwi orated or ornamented in any manner, sixty per cent valorem; if not ornamented or decorated, fifty-five per ad valorem.

97. Articles and wares composed wholly or in chief value of or mineral substances, or carbon, not specially provid in this Act, if not decorated in any manner, thirty-fi centum ad valorem; if decorated, forty-five per cent valorem.

98. Gas retorts, three dollars each; lava tips for burners, ter per gross and fifteen per centum ad valorem; carbons fo tric lighting, ninety cents per hundred; filter tubes, for per centum ad valorem; porous carbon pots for electi teries, without metallic connections, twenty per cent valorem.

GLASS AND GLASSWARE:

99. Plain green or colored, molded or pressed, and flint, lime, glass bottles, vials, jars, and covered or uncovered den and carboys, any of the foregoing, filled or unfilled, not wise specially provided for, and whether their conte dutiable or free, (except such as contain merchandise to an ad valorem rate of duty, or to a rate of duty ba whole or in part upon the value thereof, which shall b able at the rate applicable to their contents) shall pay d follows: If holding more than one pint, one cent per if holding not more than one pint and not less tha fourth of a pint, one and one-half cents per pound; i ing less than one-fourth of a pint, fifty cents per gross vided, That none of the above articles shall pay a less duty than forty per centum ad valorem.

100. Glass bottles, decanters, or other vessels or articles of gla engraved, painted, colored, stained, silvered, gilded, e frosted, printed in any manner or otherwise ornamente orated, or ground (except such grinding as is necess fitting stoppers), and any articles of which such glass component material of chief value, and porcelain, op other blown glassware; all the foregoing, filled or unfille whether their contents be dutiable or free, sixty per cen valorem.

two and seven-eighths cents per pound; above that, and n exceeding thirty by forty inches square, three and three-eightl cents per pound; above that, and not exceeding forty by sixt inches square, three and seven-eighths cents per pound; abov that, four and three-eighths cents per pound: Provided, Tha unpolished cylinder, crown, and common window glass, imported in boxes, shall contain fifty square feet, as nearly as sizes wil permit, and the duty shall be computed thereon according to the actual weight of glass.

Cylinder and crown glass, polished, not exceeding sixteen by twenty-four inches square, four cents per square foot; above that, and not exceeding twenty-four by thirty inches square, six cents per square foot; above that, and not exceeding twenty-four by sixty inches square, fifteen cents per square foot; above that, twenty cents per square foot.

Fluted, rolled, ribbed, or rough plate glass, or the same containing a wire netting within itself, not including crown, cylinder, or common window glass, not exceeding sixteen by twenty-four inches square, three-fourths of one cent per square foot; above that, and not exceeding twenty-four by thirty inches square, one and one-fourth cents per square foot; all above that, one and three-fourths cents per square foot; and all fluted, rolled, ribbed, or rough plate glass, weighing over one hundred pounds per one hundred square feet, shall pay an additional duty on the excess at the same rates herein imposed: Provided, That all of the above plate glass, when ground, smoothed, or otherwise obscured, shall be subject to the same rate of duty as cast polished plate glass unsilvered. Cast polished plate glass, finished or unfinished and unsilvered, not exceeding sixteen by twenty-four inches square, eight cents per square foot; above that, and not exceeding twenty-four by thirty inches square, ten cents per square foot; above that, and not exceeding twenty-four by sixty inches square, twenty-two and one-half cents per square foot; all above that, thirty-five cents per square foot.

Cast polished plate glass, silvered, cylinder and crown glass, silvered, and looking-glass plates, exceeding in size one hundred and forty-four square inches and not exceeding sixteen by twenty-four inches square, eleven cents per square foot; above that, and not exceeding twenty-four by thirty inches square, thirteen cents per square foot; above that, and not exceeding twenty-four by sixty inches square, twenty-five cents per square foot; all above that, thirty-eight cents per square foot.

But no looking-glass plates or plate glass, silvered, when framed, shall pay a less rate of duty than that imposed upon similar glass of like description not framed, but shall pay in addition thereto upon such frames the rate of duty applicable thereto when imported separate.

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