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401

Fir, spruce, pine, hemlock, or larch:
Timber hewn, sided, or squared,
otherwise than by sawing.
Round timber used for spars or in
building wharves.
Sawed lumber and timber, n. s.
p. f.

In estimating board measure for
the purposes of this paragraph
no deduction shall be made on
account of planing, tonguing,
and grooving.
Boards, planks and deals, rough
or not further manufactured
than planed or dressed on one
side, when imported from a
country contiguous to the
Continental United States,
which country admits free of
duty similar lumber imported
from the United States.
402 Maple (except Japanese maple),
birch, and beech flooring.
Brier root or wood, ivy or laurel
root, and similar wood, unmanu-
factured, or not further advanced
than cut into blocks suitable for
the articles into which they are
intended to be converted.
Sawed boards, planks, deals, and
other forms not further manu-
factured than sawed, and flooring
of Spanish cedar, lignum vitæ,
lancewood, ebony, box, grana-
dilla, mahogany, rosewood,
satinwood, Japanese white oak,
and Japanese maple.

403

404

405

406

407

408

409

Veneers.

Plywood:

Birch and alder.

Other woods..

Wood, unmanufactured, n. s. p. f.
Hubs for wheels; heading and stave
bolts; last, wagon, oar, heading,
and like blocks or sticks, rough
hewn, or rough shaped, sawed or
bored.

Casks, barrels, and hogsheads
(empty), sugar-box shooks, and
packing boxes (empty), and pack-
ing-box shooks, of wood, n. s. p. f.
Boxes, barrels, and other articles
containing oranges, lemons, limes,
grapefruit, shaddocks or pomelos.
Reeds wrought or manufactured
from rattan or reeds, whether
round, flat, split, oval, or in what-
ever form.

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Provided, That the thin wood, so called, comprising the sides, tops, and bottoms of fruit boxes of the growth or manufacture of the United States, exported as fruit-box shooks, may be reimported in completed form, filled with fruit, by the payment of duty at one-half the rate imposed on similar boxes of entirely foreign growth and manufacture; but proof of the identity of such shooks shall be made under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury.

Provided, That the thin wood, so called, comprising the sides, tops and bottoms of fruit boxes of the growth and manufacture of the United States, exported as fruit box shooks, may be reimported in completed form, filled with fruit, without the payment of duty; but proof of the identity of such shooks shall be made under regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury.

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20¢ per gross.
40 per cent..

33% per cent.

412 Spring clothespins..

Furniture, wholly or partly fin-
ished, and parts thereof, wholly
or in chief value of wood, n. s. p. f.
Folding rules, wholly or in chief
value of wood, and n. s. p. f.
Wood moldings and carvings to be
used in architectural and furni-
ture decoration.

Bent-wood furniture, wholly or
partly finished, and parts thereof.
Paintbrush handles, wholly or in
chief value of wood.
Wood flour..

Manufactures of wood or bark, or of
which wood or bark is the com-
ponent material of chief value,
n. s. p. f.

4 Seagrass added by act of 1930.

40 per cent....
40 per cent.

5 House or cabinet furniture wholly or in chief value of wood, wholly or partly finished, n. s. p. f.

• Willow furniture.

7 Furniture made with frames wholly or in part of wood, rattan, etc., act of 1922.

& Manufactures of wood, n. s. p. f.

• Osier or willow manufactures.

10 Not specially provided for.

11 If stained, dyed, painted, polished, grained, or creosoted.

12 Manufactures of palm leaf, n. s. p. f., 15 per cent; manufactures of papier-mâché, n. s. p. f., 25 per cent. 13 Nonenumerated manufactured articles.

14 Manufactures of wood, n. s. p. f.

15 1623 per cent by presidential proclamation, effective Nov. 13, 1926, under sec. 315.

15¢ per gross.
33% per cent..

15 per cent.13 25 per cent.12 15 per cent.14 15 per cent.

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47% per cent..

33% per cent..
33% per cent.

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SCHEDULE 5.-SUGAR, MOLASSES, AND MANUFACTURES OF

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501

502

Sugars, tank bottoms, sirups of cane
juice, melada, concentrated
melada, concrete and concen-
trated molasses, testing by the
polariscope not above 75 sugar
degrees.

For each additional sugar degree
shown by the polariscopic test
(fractions of a degree in pro-
portion).

Mixtures containing sugar and
water, testing by thepolariscope
above 50 and not above 75 sugar
degrees.1

For each additional sugar degree
shown by the polariscopic test
(fractions of a degree in pro-
portion).

Molasses and sugar sirups, n. s. p. f.:
Testing not above 48 per cent
total sugars.3

Testing above 48 per cent total
sugars, for each per cent of total
sugars (fractions of a per cent
in proportion).3

Molasses not imported to be com-
mercially used for the extrac-
tion of sugar or for human con-
sumption."

Molasses testing not above 52 per

cent total sugars, not im-
ported to be commercially used
for the extraction of sugar or for
human consumption.5
Testing above 52 and not above

56 per cent total sugars, not
imported to be commercially
used for the extraction of sugar
or for human consumption.5

Molasses testing:

Not above 40 degrees.

Above 40 and not above 56 de

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17125/10000
per lb.

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8 cents per lb.

51⁄2 cents per lb.
2 cents per lb..

4 cents per lb..

$2.50 per ton of
2,000 lbs.

(8).

11⁄2 cents per lb....
$1 per ton of 2,000
lbs.
(8).

15 per cent.1.6
214 cents per gal.1.6

41⁄2 cents per gal.1.0
3 cents per lb.
1% cents per lb.
15 per cent.

(9).

1 Effective Mar. 1, 1914. Previous to this date the rates of the act of 1909 remained in effect. The 1913 act also provided for the free entry of such raw sugars, on and after May 1, 1916, which proviso was repealed by the act of Apr. 27, 1916.

* Emergency tariff act of 1921, par. 20: Sugars, tank bottoms, sirups of cane juice, melada, concentrated melada, concrete and concentrated molasses, testing by the polariscope not above 75 degrees, 1 cents per pound, and for every additional degree shown by the polariscopic test, r cent per pound additional, and fractions of a degree in proportion; sugar drainings and sugar sweepings shall be subject to duty as molasses or sugar, as the case may be, according to polariscopic test.

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Subject to duty as molasses or sugar, as the case may be, according to polariscopic test.
New classification made by act of 1922 and continued in act of 1930.

The test by per centum of total sugars introduced by act of 1922, and by total sugar content in pounds by act of 1930.

Emergency tariff act of 1921, par. 20: Molasses testing not above 40 degrees, 24 per centum ad valorem; testing above 40 degrees and not above 56 degrees, 31⁄2 cents per gallon, testing above 56 degrees, 7 cents per gallon.

? Glucose or grape sugar in act of 1913.

$75 per cent of the rate of duty applicable to manufactured sugar of like polariscopic test.

Dutiable according to polariscopic test.

10 New classification made by act of 1922 and retained in act of 1930.

Paragraph, act of

1930

Schedule 5.-Sugar, Molasses, and Manufactures of-Continued

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505 Adonite, arabinose, dulcite, galac- 50 per cent..
tose, inosite, inulin, levulose,
mannite, d-talose, d-tagatose,
ribose, melibiose, dextrose testing
above 99.7 per cent, mannose,
melezitose, raffinose, rhamnose,
sorbite, xylose, and other saccha-
rides.11

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11 New classification made by act of 1922 and retained in the act of 1930 with the specific mention of lactose. 12 Emergency tariff act of 1921, par. 24: Sugar of milk, 5 cents per pound.

18 The weight and value of the immediate coverings, other than the outer packing case or other covering, shall be included in the dutiable weight and the value of the merchandise.

14 But not less than the rate of duty provided in paragraph 501 for sugar of the same polariscopic test

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