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Vessels over 1,400 tons, per ton additional

.05

Vessels outside of pilot limits, or in case of accidents, etc., as per agreement.

Port physician's charges:

Boarding vessels outside..

25.00

Boarding vessels in port..

15.00

Boarding vessels at wharf

10.00

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To vessels at wharf, per gallon

To vessels by lighter, in harbor, per gallon............

To vessels by lighter, outside of harbor, per gallon.

Marine railway: Capacity for 1,700-ton vessels in light ballast-hauling charges, per steamers, 50 cents; sailing vessels, 40 cents. Charges after the first day, 25 cents per ton for steamers and 20 cents per ton for sailing vessels, per day.

.02

.00

.01

01

KAISER WILHELM'S LAND AND BISMARCK ARCHIPELAGO, GERMAN NEW GUINEA.

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Beer and mead, in bottles containing up to 14 quarts, per bottle.

0.10

$0.0238

Cider and other wines of fruits, in bottles containing up to 13 pints, per bottle.

20

.0476

Per bottle of 13 pints

Cider and other wines of fruits, in bottles containing up to 14 quarts, per bottle.
Wines, sweet (such as Malaga, Madeira, sparkling, etc.):

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Wines, other than foregoing:

Per bottle of 1 pints

Per bottle of 14 quarts.

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Per bottle of 14 quarts.

Brandy and liqueurs, and all other spirituous liquors:

In bottles or jars up to 1 pint, per bottle..

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Per bottle or jar of 1 pints.

Per bottle or jar of 1 quart.
Per bottle or jar of 14 quarts
Fruits preserved in spirits:

Per bottle or jar of 1 pint.
Per bottle or jar of 14 pints
Per bottle or jar of 1 quart..
Per bottle or jar of 13 quarts

The importation of beer, cider, wine, or liquors in receptacles other than in bottles containing up to 14 quarts shall not be authorized.

All the foregoing articles must, as a general rule, be imported in packages containing 12 packages or a multiple of 12.

Pharmaceutical spirits imported in small quantities shall be exempt from duty. Export duty.-Copra, per ton, 4 marks (95.2 cents).

Prohibited goods.-Opium, except for medicinal purposes.

The sale and delivery of arms, ammunition, explosives, or spirits to natives are subjected to special regulations.

All other imports and exports are duty free.

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MARSHALL ISLANDS.

[NOTE. No customs ordinance has been enacted for the Marshall Islands.]

TAXES.

Ordinance No. 238, relative to the collection of trading taxes ("Gewerbesteuern").

The ordinance of the imperial commissioner of the Marshall Islands, dated June 28, 1888, relative to the collection of trading taxes, has been amended by the ordinances of July 15, 1889, and August 2, 1890.

Conformably to these amendments this ordinance now reads as follows:

SECTION 1. On and after October 1, 1889, trading taxes shall be collected at the following rates:

(a) For commercial firms established in the Protectorate the annual business of which amounts to 500,000 marks ($119,000) and

more.....

(b) For firms the annual business of which amounts to less than 500,000 marks.

(c) For taverns and hotels of all kinds..

(d) For trading vessels effecting commercial transactions in the
Protectorate for account of firms not established therein.
(e) For every trading station in the Marshall Islands
(f) For every trading station in Naura......

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SEC. 2. The taxes enumerated in section 1 under letters a, b, c, e, f, must be paid quarterly and in advance, and those mentioned in letter d, before the vessel begins her voyage in the Protectorate.

SEC. 3. Should one of the vessels mentioned in section 1 d begin a trading voyage in the Protectorate without having paid the stipulated tax, a fine not exceeding 6,000 marks ($1,428) shall be inflicted. The vessel as well as the cargo, whoever may be the owner, shall be held as guarantee for the payment of this fine.

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Firearms

Woolen coverlets, etc..

Woolen tissues, mixed, in pieces, when wool predominates..
Silk fabrics, when the silk predominates..

Jewelry, and gold and silversmiths' work.

Watches and clocks

Musical and clock work instruments.

Pieces of steam machinery for locomotives and organs, etc
Machinery and organs..

Perforated sheets, iron, copper, tin, zinc, etc..

Anchors, cables, chains, wire rope, couplings, in iron or steel

Iron and wire nails..

Iron or wire screws, bolts, hinges, hooks, etc., with nuts, rivets, etc
Zinc work

Musical instruments

Hats, straw and other fiber..

Velocipedes and pieces of same
Railway carriages

Felt and woolen hats.

Silk hats.

Corsets...

20.00

3.86

45.00

8.65

300.00

57.90

..ad valorem.

10 p. c.

..do..

10 p. c.

.do..

10 p. c.

5.00

.965

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..ad valorem..

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each..

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SEA OCTROI OF NEW CALEDONIA.

I. Decree temporarily giving effect to the deliberations of the Council General of April 27, 1897, and May 9 and 10, 1898, relative to sea octroi.

["Journal Officiel " No. 2034, of October 29, 1898.]

We, governor of New Caledonia and dependencies, knight of the Legion of Honor, officer of the Academy, taking into consideration the decree of December 12, 1874; taking into consideration the cablegram dated October 8, 1898; the privy council having been consulted, have decreed and do decree:

ARTICLE 1. The deliberations of the Council General, dated April 27, 1897, and May 9 and 10, 1898, relative to sea octroi shall, on and after November 7, 1898, temporarily be executory.

ART. 2. The present decree shall be inserted in the "Journal" and "Bulletin Officiels" of the colony, communicated and recorded wherever required.

NOUMEA, October 28, 1898.

P. FEILLET.

ANNEX A.-Deliberation of the Council General of April 27, 1897.

REGULATIONS RELATIVE TO SEA OCTROI.

ARTICLE 1. Sea octroi shall, on importation through sea ports in New Caledonia, be collected on the goods enumerated in the tariff, whatever be their origin, whencesoever proceeding, under whatever flag imported, and whatever be their destination in the colony.

ART. 2. On and after November 7, 1898, sea octroi in New Caledonia shall be collected in accordance with the tariff annexed to the present decree.

ART. 3. Any person harvesting, preparing, or manufacturing in the interior of the territory subject to sea octroi articles comprised in the tariff, is bound to make a declaration thereof, and unless such person claims the faculty of warehousing, to immediately pay the octroi.

ART. 4. The frontier customs and interior fiscal employees shall, for account of the local service, collect the sea octroi. The surveillance of places of manufacture in the interior shall be insured by the customs and fiscal agents.

ART. 5. The legal and reglementary dispositions relating to customs are applicable to sea octroi in all matters concerning declarations, contestations, liquidation of sea octroi and the coasting trade.

ART. 6. The sea octroi shall be leviable on net weight. The benefit of the tare, real or legal, shall accrue to the goods, whatever be their origin and the amount of octroi.

ART. 7. Goods liable to sea octroi may be removed prior to payment on the same conditions of guaranty as goods chargeable with customs duties.

ART. 8. The mode of classification indicated in the explanatory notes to the customs tariff is adopted for guiding the service in classifying goods liable to sea octroi.

ART. 9. Stores destined to the service of the navy shall be placed in its warehouses in the same manner as goods admitted into customs warehouses. An account thereof shall be kept by the employees, and sea octroi shall be payable on all quantities removed to any destination other than for Government vessels.

ART. 10. Military uniforms and effects shall also be exempt from sea octroi, as well as armament imported for the defense of the colony.

ART. 11. From the gross proceeds of the sea octroi the following sums shall be deducted for expenses of supervision, examination, liquidation, and collection:

1. For the benefit of the local budget, for contributive share of the communes in the expenses of the customs and fiscal personnel and materials necessary for their service, a sum to be determined each month by the governor. This deduction is calculated in such a manner that the aggregate amount of the monthly expenditure of the customs and fiscal service be borne by the colony on one part, and by the communes on the other part, proportionally to the receipts collected for them, on the liquidations effected by the above-named service.

2. For the benefit of customs and fiscals employees, as an extra allowance above their fixed salary, a commission of 1 per cent. The mode of repartition of this allowance shall be regulated by a decree of the governor in privy council.

3. For the benefit of the treasurer-paymaster, a commission of 50 centimes per cent. This treble deduction can not exceed one-fifth of the gross receipts. In case the application of the foregoing provisions should involve a deduction exceeding the aforesaid proportion, the share due to the local budget must be reduced in such manner that four-fifths of the proceeds shall accrue to the communes.

ART. 12. After the deductions prescribed in the preceding article have been made, the proceeds of the sea octroi are attributed one-half to the commune of Noumea and the other half to the other communes. The quota allotted to the communes is divided among them, one-half in proportion to their compulsory expenditure and one-half pro rata to their population, it being understood that the natives are only reckoned at one-twentieth of their number.

ART. 13. All dispositions contrary to the present decree, and particularly the decree dated December 23, 1887, establishing a sea octroi in New Caledonia, are and remain repealed.

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