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Rubber-Continued.

Rubber tires or parts thereof for bicycles or motor cycles (642A).

Rubber waste and worn rubber goods. Saccharine or other artificial sweetening matter.

Salts (see also, Chemicals):

Andrenalin and preparations thereof.
Areca.

Atropamine.

Bromic acid. (See Bromide.)
Bromide that can not be referred to
par 1145 and bromic acid salts (Fr.
1259).

Caffeine and preparations thereof.
Diethylamine carbamine (veronal).
Duboisine and combinations thereof.
Epinephrine and preparations thereof.
Epirenine and preparations thereof.
Hexamethylane.

Surgical supplies-Continued.

Thermometers, fever (1267).
Turpentine (except that which, accord-
ing to certificate of origin, is made in
Sweden).

Survey instruments and recognizable parts
thereof (Fr. 1260).

Tanning materials (see also, Chemicals):
Vegetable, such as oak bark, myroba-
lanes, and quebracho wood, whole or in
pieces, ground, rasped, or divided in any
other way,
and extracts of tanning ma-
terials, liquid or solid; also gall nuts; val-
lonea; oak wood, catecu, quebracho,
other kinds.

Tar paints, etc. (See Chemicals.)
Timber, pine or fir, other timber.
Tires. (See Vehicles.)

Tongs and scissors for clipping off iron and
metal wire (Fr. 830-833).

Iodine, which can not be referred to Torpedoes. (See War material.)

par. 1145.

Tubes. (See Vehicles.)

l'aranephrine and preparations thereof Turpentine (except that which, according

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Vehicles and accessories-Continued.
Wheels for automobiles (Fr. 1098K).
(Remarks: The prohibition of export of
vehicles with motor includes also all
parts of such vehicles not specially
mentioned.)

War material (see also, Arms and ammuni-
tion and explosives), not specially men-
tioned, and parts thereof; armor, other
kinds cannon, howitzers and mortars,
projectiles, cartridge cases; empty, fitted
for ammunition ready for use; carriages,
limber carriages and ammunition wag-
ons, torpedoes, other kinds. Steel tubes
for gun pipes (Fr. 888-890 and Fr. 894-
896). Steel pipes for shrapnels (Fr. 755-
758).

Pieces of turned steel for shells (Fr. 885-896).

Wire, copper (see also, Copper):

Twisted into lines or cables, without isolation, with a covering of lead or

Wire, copper-Continued.

other metal, with or without isolator, also in combination with other materials; also electric cables or wires, with or without isolator. Covered with rubber, gutta-percha, or other isolating material, not spe cially mentioned, alone or in combination with chips and shavings, paper, or asbestos; also electric cables or wires isolated in such a manner. Isolated by means of shavings, paper, asbestos, varnish, alone or by means of a combination of several of these; also electric cables and wires isolated in this manner.

Isolated in other ways; also other elec-
trical cables and wires (912-921).
Barbed (Fr. 8641C).

Wood. (See Timber.)
Wool. (See Clothing, etc.)

From April 22, 1915, and until further notice is given, goods which have previously not been prohibited for export, but which are entirely or partially manufactured of prohibitions of export, are not to be exported from the Kingdom, either by land or sea, provided the quantity of the goods or the circumstances connected with the case give rise to the suspicion that the goods have been manufactured in order to enable the exportation of the material that is prohibited.

Licenses permitting the export of goods which are on the list of prohibited exports may not be used after July 27, 1915, in case they were granted before May 1, 1915.

Articles prohibited from exportation will not be allowed to pass in postal packets in transit through Sweden.

SWITZERLAND.

Electric cables of all kinds and insulated electric wires.

Arms and their component parts, gun- | Surgical bandages and batting of cotton. stocks, walnut wood, ammunition, explosives, and pyrogenic articles, sulphur, saltpeter, and soda.

Aluminium sulfate and hydrate; salts of tin.

Antimony and other ores, yellow and red phosphorus.

Copper, tin, zinc, lead, iron (scrap iron), iron and steel wire of all kinds, rails and iron beams.

Graphite crucibles.

Telephone apparatus, as well as component

parts thereof, notably microphones, field
cables, insulating rubber, electric bat-
teries; electric ignition plugs for auto-
mobiles.

Boats and vehicles with or without motor,
for the transportation of passengers or
freight, not including bicycles.
Sanitary equipment (not including medi-
cal and surgical instruments), medica-
ments (except serums and vaccins), dis-
infectants.

Parts of automobiles and benzine motors
for automobiles. Furniture and tank
cars returning empty to foreign parts or
exported in order to be filled may until
further orders go out without special au-
thorization.

Acetanilide (antifebrin).
Acetone.

Acetylo-salicylic acid.

Citric acid.

Salicylic acid and salicylate of soda.
Tartaric acid.

Adrenaline, natural or artificial, and other
extracts from suprarenal glands (supra-
renine, paranephrine, epirenane, etc.).
Agar.
Aloes.

Aluminium, acetotartrate of.
Antipyrine.
Apomorphine.

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Formaline (formaldehyde, formic alde- Theobromin and its salts and compounds.

hyde, formol), liquid.

Glycerine, pure.1

Heroine.

Castor oil.

Iodin and its salts.

Iodoform.

Ipecacuanha root.

Lanoline (wool grease).
Mastic.

Mercury and its salts.

Morphine and its salts.
Naphthaline.

Novocaine.

Opium and opium powders, extracts, tinc-
tures.

Paraffin, solid or liquid.
Paraformaldehyde.

Permanganate of potassium.

Phenacetine.

Phenol (phenic acid), pure.
Phosphorus.

Phosphorus sesquisulphid.
Spanish pepper.

Quinine, chlorohydrate and sulfate of.
Cinchona (Peruvian bark).

Rhubarb root.

Salol.

Saltpeter.

Salvarsan, neosalvarsan.

Santonin.

Scopolamin (hyoscin).

Sesquisulphid.

Sodium chlorate.

Tropacocaine and its compounds.
Vaseline.

Mineral oils, tar oils, and resinous oils (ben-
zine, petroleum, petroleum residues,
naphtha, turpentine, etc.); tar, alcohol,
fuel of all kinds (anthracite coal, lignite,
coke, briquettes, firewood, etc.).
Clothing and articles of equipment for the
use of troops, such as underclothes, win-
ter gloves, stockings, footwear for men
(weighing over 1,200 grams a pair),3
woolen blankets.

Wool, cotton (crude or bleached); jute

sacks and jute textiles serving in their manufacture.

Horses, mules, and asses, as well as their usual harness, and horseshoeing equipment.

Live stock (large and small), poultry, and military and police dogs.

Fodder of all kinds (hay, bran, marc [refuse

from pressing grapes and other fruits], etc.), straw, bedding of all kinds, seeds, artificial fertilizers, bones, and bone dust. Foodstuffs. Biscuits, other fine sweetened and unsweetened cakes, milk (fresh).

Shoemakers' glue and starch, starch powder, rubber solution.

Leather and skins.5

Unworked leather of all kinds.

Boots and shoes of all kinds and parts thereof.

1 Until further orders crude glycerine shall not fall under the export embargo.

2 Cotton goods of all kinds may be exported until further orders without special authorization.

3 See also partially elaborated leather footwear for men, decision of Oct. 20, 1914, hereinafter.

Until further orders the following foodstuffs may se exported without special authorization: Soft cheeses, such as Tilsit, Munster, and Monkhead; cheeses like the Schabziger de Glaris and Appenzell cheeses; hard cheeses in slices weighing 5 kilograms at most. Fresh fruits in shipments up to 100 kilograms; fresh and trampled grapes. Snails; game animals and game birds.

5 Skins of wild animals, fresh and dry, may be exported until further orders without special authorization.

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The exporation of hardtack without sugar Rag pulp. is prohibited. Kaolin.

Chocolate (including cake chocolate) and substitutes for coffee also fall under the prohibitions.

Timber-raw, hewn, split, sawed, and shaped.

India rubber and its substitutes.

Pneumatic and other rubber tires for ve-
hicles and vel cipedes.2
Saltpeter, not purified.
Tan, tan bark.

Waste from wool, combings.
Artificial wool.

Crude carborindon.
Iron pyrites.

Chromite, ferromanganese, tungsten iron;

raw.

Copper, lead, zinc, tin, as well as the alloys
of these metals, crude or in plates, disks,
bars, wire, sheets, etc.

Copper, lead, antimony, and other ores.
Nickel and its alloys, crude or in plates,

bars, sheets, wire, etc.

Lens and prism opera glasses.

Purified pine resin (colophony).

Candles and wax tapers of all kinds, except
Christmas-tree candles.

Soap of all kinds.

Products of all kinds for lye.

All kinds of coffee substitutes; chicory roots, fresh and dried; torrefied figs. Chocolate. (The term "chocolate" figuring under letter i of article 1 of the decision of the Federal Council of Sept. 18, 1914, should be stricken out.)

Vinegar, acetic acid, and essence of vinegar,
containing more than 12 per cent of pure
acetic acid.

Articles made of soft rubber, even com-
bined with other substances, with the
exception of elastic textiles.
Retort carbon.

Tinplate in sheets or cut out.

Electric cables of all kinds and insulated electric wires, of pure or alloyed copper.

Aluminum and its alloys,crude or in plates, Catechu, including gambier; kino.

bars, sheets, wire, etc.

Sulfid of antimony (native antimony).
Benzine motors for automobiles.

Parts of automobiles, such as chassis,
bodies, etc.

Ignition plugs for automobiles.
Nitrate and nitrite of lead.
Compressed protoxid of nitrogen (laughing

gas), also in liquid form.

Nitrates, such as nitrate of potassium and
of sodium, nitrate of calcium.
Nitrites, such as nitrite of soda, nitrite of
calcium.

Coal-tar pitch.

Pyrolignite of lime.

Acetic acid, crude or purified, with an empyreumatic odor.

Flax, hemp, jute, ramine (Chinese nettle), Manila hemp, and other similar textile substances and their waste products, crude, steeped, peeled or batcheled, combed, bleached, colored, etc.; oakum. Yarns of the textile sul stances named under No. 396; unbleached.

Sulfuric acid which has already been used as a fertilizer or for other purposes.

Nitric acid; mixed acid (mixed with sul- Timber, raw, hewn, split, sawed, and

furic acid or hydrochloric acid).

Hydrochloric (muriatic) acid.

Sulfuric acid; sulfurous acid in solution in

water or compressed, also liquefied. Chlorsulfuric acid (sulfuric chlorhydrin); oil of vitriol (smoking sulfuric acid). Tannic acid (tannin), gallic acid, etc.3

shaped.

Ash wood, crude, resplit, squared, or
sawed.

Calves' stomachs, fresh or dried.
Unworked rennet (natural rennet), or pow-
dered rennet, extract of rennet or other
rennet preparations.

1 Until further orders unbleached fabrics of com Jed wool may be exported without special authorization.

2 By the decision of January 22, 1915, the export embargo was extended to all articles made of soft rubber, even when combined with other substances, with the exception of elastic textile fabrics.

3 See also catechu, including gambier, and kino.

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Mica in sheets or tablets, oval or rectangular (cleavage mica): Crude, not glued together.

Articles of all kinds, including tubes, of aluminum or aluminum alloys.

Lac (varnish) in flakes, even ground.
Chlorate of potassium.

Blue vitriol and so-called fungivorous products; ammoniacal sulfate of copper; steatite with sulfate of copper.

Boots and shoes, all kinds, and parts thereof.

Camphor, raw, refined.

Cheese (all kinds) except Glarner, Kraeuterkase or Schabzeiger, limited to threefourths of normal exportation, one-third of which limit may be exported from April 1 to August 1, by members of cheese exporting association. Cotton batting.

Crucibles.

Graphite.

Surgical bandages.

Additional export embargoes enforced June 15, 1915:

Raw tobacco leaves, rils, and stems. Grape juice and wine containing not over 15 per cent alcohol, in barrels.

Used petroleum and oil barrels of wood or sheet metal.

Ordinary carded or glued cotton waste. Pocket lamp battery carbons. Iron nails for mountain shoes. Iron or steel ball bearings, parts thereof. Half finished and manufactured articles, including tubes of copper, lead, zinc, tin, nickel, and their alloys, except machines.

Mechanical tools.

Vehicles.

Watches.

Clocks.

Instruments and apparatus.
Cerium.

Wrought iron and steel flasks for gases.
Electric transformers, parts thereof.

New and used iron lathes, also with other component materials, parts thereof. Medical and surgical instruments and apparatus.

Fever thermometers, glasses thereof. All natural and artificial raw and manufactured tanning materials, including chromium sulphate and solutions thereof. Vegetable and animal raw products for pharmaceutical purposes, whether natural, crushed, or otherwise mechanically treated. Manufactured pharmaceutical products including condensed plant juices, 1 alsams, resins, unmanufactured fats, oils, Chemical raw products, as carrageen moss, fleawort, etc.

Lemon juice.

Gums of all kinds. Copal.

Dammar, sandarac, and other gum-resins. Bleached, distilled, powdered, and soft resins for technical purposes, including raw pitch, turpentine, galipot, etc. All manufactured resins, including brewers' pitch, cobblers' wax, etc., and powdered resin.

Magnesite.

Alums.

Borax.

Potash. Water glass. Formic acid.

Coal-tar derivatives and auxiliary raw products for aniline colors, as benzol, chlorobenzol, naphthalene, anthracene, phenol, toluol, benzoic acid, etc. Analine, raw and manufactured. Aniline oils, salts, and combinations for manufacturing colors, as toluidine, dimethyl-aniline, phthalic acids, etc. Resorcin.

Egg and blood albumen and vitellus for technical purposes.

All waxes, as floor wax, leather polish, and oils. Cleaning pomades, soaps, and similar turpentinous fatty substances.

Additional embargoes enforced July 5,1915: Fresh, dried, or salted animal intestines and bladders.

Compressed fluid or gaseous chlorine ir wrought iron or steel flasks. Regenerated, crushed, or doughlike manganese superoxide.

Sodium phosphate, methyl alcohol, graphite, crushed, powder, pressed, etc. Following enforced July 16, 1915: Gold, pure or alloy, fragments, chips, ashes, refuse and dross; also unmanufactured, coined, rolled into foils and strips.

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