Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 28.djvu/573

 544 FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Srzss. Il. Ch. 349. 1894. F¤¤¤¤¤¢-—¤<>¤¤¤¤•>¤· 597. Pulu. i 598. Pumice. _ 600. Quills, prepared or unprepared, but not made up into complete articles. 601. Quinia, sulphate of, and all alkaloids or salts of cinchona bark. 602. Rags, not otherwise specially provided for in this Act. 1¤>:¤i¤»¤*~· 603. Regalia and gems, statues, statuary, and specimens or casts of sculpture where specially imported in good faith for the use of any society incorporated or established solely for educational, philosophical, literary, or religious purposes, or for the encouragement of fine arts, or for the use or by order of any college, academy, school, seminary of learning, or public library in the United States; but the term “regalia " as herein used shall be held to embrace only such insignia of rank or office or emblems, as may be worn upon the person or borne in the hand during public exercises of the society or institution, and shall not include articles of furniture or iixtures, or of regular wearing apparel, nor personal property of individuals. 604. Rennets, raw or prepared. 605. Saffron and saftlower, and extract of, and saiiron cake. 606. Sago, crude, and sago flour. 607. Salacine. We ¤¤¤· 608. Salt in bulk, and salt in bags, sacks, barrels, or other packages, but the coverings shall pay the same rate of duty as if imported sepagvvix {mm com rately: Provided, That if salt is imported hom any country whether m,,,",'j,,,,,,,,,g£ d.,,,_ independent_or a dependency which imposes a duty upon salt exported Wi- 2°»P- · from the United States, then there shall be levied, paid, and collected upon such salt the rate of duty existing prior to the passage of this Act. ` 609. Sauerluant. 610. Sausage skins. 611. Seeds; anise, canary, caraway, cardamom, coriander, cotton, croton, cummin, fennel, fenugreek, hemp, hoarhound, mustard, rape, Saint John’s bread or bene, sugar beet, mangel-wurzel, sorghum or sugar cane for seed, and all flower and grass seed; bulbs and roots, not edible; all the foregoing not specially provided for in this Act. 612. Selep, or saloup. ~ 613. Shells of all kinds, not cut, ground, or otherwise man uihctured. 614. Shotgun barrels, iorged, rough bored. 615. Shrimps, and other shellfish, canned or otherwise. 616. Silk, raw, or as reeled from the cocoon, but not doubled, twisted, nor advanced in manufacture in any way. 617. Silk cocoons and silk waste. 618. Silk worm’s eggs. 619. Skeletons and other preparations of anatomy. 620. Snails. 621. Soda. nitrate of, or cubic nitrate, and chlorate of. 622. Sulphate of Soda, or salt cake, or niter cake. 623. Sodium. 624. Sparterre, suitable for making or ornamenting hats. 625. Specimens of natural history, botany, and mineralogy, when imported for cabinets or as objects of science, and not for sale. fvim- Srrcns: 626. Cassia, cassia vera, and cassia buds, unground. 627. Cinnamon, and chips of, unground. 628. Cloves and clove stems, unground. 629. Ginger-root, unground and not preserved or candied. 630. Mace. 631. Nutmegs. 632. Pepper, black or white, unground. 633. Pimento, unground. 635. Spunk.