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pened by mistake or accident, and not from any intention to defraud the revenue.

SECT. 3052. None of the provisions of this Title shall operate to prevent the exportation of bonded merchandise from warehouse within three years from the date of original importation, nor its transportation in bond from the port into which it was originally imported to any other port for the purpose of exportation.

SECT. 3053. Any merchandise imported from the British North American provinces adjoining the United States, which shall have been duly entered and the duties thereon paid or secured according to law at either of the ports of entry in the collection-districts situated on the northern, north-eastern, and north-western frontiers of the United States, may be transported by land or by water, or partly by land and partly by water, to any port or ports from which merchandise may be exported for benefit of drawback, and be thence exported with such privilege to any foreign country. The laws relating to the transportation of merchandise entitled to drawback, and the due exportation and proof of landing thereof, and all regulations which the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe for the security of the revenue, must, however, be complied with.

SECT. 3054. Any imported merchandise, in the original packages, which shall have been duly entered and warehoused in pursuance of the provisions relating to warehouses, may be exported therefrom in conformity with law, and be transported, in the manner indicated, to ports in the adjoining British provinces, and become entitled to the benefits of those provisions.

SECT. 3055. Merchandise imported into the United States and exported from the port of Lake Ponchartrain, shall be entitled to the benefit of a drawback of the duties upon exportation to any foreign port under the same provisions, regulations, restrictions, and limitations as if such merchandise had been exported directly from New Orleans by way of the Mississippi River.

SECT. 3056. Any imported merchandise which has been entered, and the duties paid or secured according to law, for drawback, may be exported to the British North American provinces adjoining the United States.

SECT. 3057. The Secretary of the Treasury is hereby further authorized to prescribe such rules and regulations, not inconsistent with the laws of the United States, as he may deem necessary to carry into effect the provisions of the laws relating to drawbacks, and to prevent the illegal re-importation of any merchandise which shall have been exported as herein provided.

The following is from act of March 3, 1875, Sect. 3: And provided further, That of the drawback on refined sugars exported, allowed by section three thousand and nineteen of the Revised Statutes of the United States, only one per centum of the amount so allowed shall be retained by the United States.

Under act of March 3, 1883, the following temporary rates of drawback on sugar have been fixed by the Secretary of the Treasury, to continue in effect until September 1, 1883:

On refined loaf, cut-loaf, crushed, granulated, and powdered sugar, stove-dried, or dried by other equally effective process, 282 cents per pound.

On refined white coffee sugar, undried, and above No. 20 Dutch standard in color, 22 cents per pound.

On all grades of refined coffee sugar No. 20 Dutch standard and below in color, 14 cents per pound.

On syrup resulting entirely from the refining of the above enumerated imported materials, 4 cents per pound.

The allowance on sugars will be subject to the deduction of one per cent., and the allowance on syrup to the deduction of 10 per cent. as prescribed by law.

INDEX.

[The figures refer to the pages.]

ABANDONED VESSELS,

merchandise from, 135.

ABORTIONS,

drugs and instruments for causing, 1, 2, 3.

ABSINTHE, 68.

ACIDS, 9, 12, 116.

ACONITE, 112.

ACORNS, 63.

AGATES, 116.

AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT,

trees, seeds, plants, etc., imported by, 95.

ALABASTER, 95.

ALBATA, 43.

ALBUMEN, 112.

ALCOHOL, 19, 66, 67, 68.

amylic, 20.

ALCOHOLIC PREPARATIONS,

compounds, perfumery, etc., 19, 67, 68.

ALE, 68.

ALIZARINE, 116.

ALKALIS, 16.

ALKALOIDS, 16.

ALLOWANCE FOR BREAKAGE, 66, 67.

ALMONDS, 65.

ALPACA,

goat, etc., hair of, 80, 85.

manufactures of the hair of the. See Wool.

ALUM, 11.

ALUMINA, 11.

ALUMINOUS TERRA ALBA, 133.

ALUMINIUM, 119.

AMBER BEADS, 119.

gum, 119.

AMBERGRIS, 112.

AMERICAN ARTISTS,

works of art, the productions of, 134, 135.

AMMONIA, 11.

AMYLE OF OXIDE, 20.

AMYLIC ALCOHOL, 20.

ANATOMICAL PREPARATIONS, 132.

ANCHOVIES, 61, 62.

ANCHOVY SAUCE, 62.

ANILINE,

arseniate of, 117.

ANILINE SALTS, 117.

ANIMALS,

live, 58.

imported temporarily, 119.

for breeding purposes, 119, 120.

ANNATTO, 112.

ANTIMONY, 45.

ore and crude sulphide of, 117.

ANTIQUITY,

collections of, 123.

APATITE, 116.

APPRAISAL, 144, 145.

ARCHIL, 114.

ARGENTINE, 43.

ARGOLS, 11, 113.

ARRACK, 68.

ARROW-ROOT, 120.

ARSENIATE OF ANILINE, 117.

ARSENIC, 117.

ARSENIC,

metallic, 117.

sulphide of, 117.

ARTICLES,

returned as exported, 120, 121, 122.

ARTIFICIAL FEATHERS AND FLOWERS, 100

ASBESTOS, 11, 12, 117.

ASHES,

wood and beet-root, 116.

ASPHALTUM, 120.

ASSAFOETIDA, 113.

BACON, 58.

BAGATELLE-BALLS,

bone or ivory, 99.

BAGGING.

for cotton, etc., 79, 80.

BAGS, BARRELS, ETC.,

returned from abroad, 120, 121, 122.

BAIZE, 89, 90.

BALM OF GILEAD, 112.

BAMBOO,

reeds cut into lengths, 120.

unmanufactured, 120.

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