Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 36 Part 1.djvu/39

 SIXTY—FIRST CONGRESS. Srzss. I. Ch. 6. 1909. 15 cents per und; a ueous extract of 0 ium for medicinal uses, and §$§Q‘;LE A-, tincture oljoas laudlanum, and other Iiiquid preparations of opium, p¤(iiiw—C¤i¤£i(¤iii2d.nd not specially provided for in this section, forty per centum ad valorem; opium containing less than nine per centum of morphia, six dollars per pound; but preparations of 0 ium de osited in bonded warehouses shall not be removed thereiiom witiliout ayment of duties, and such duties shall not be refunded: Provided, 'llhat nothing §Q‘g",§*{’,,,,,0,, ,,0, herein contained shall be so construed as to repeal or in any manner mected. impair or affect the provisions of an Act entitled "An Act to pro- V°‘·35·P·“‘*- hibit the importation and use of opium for other than medicinal purposes," approved February ninth, nineteen hundred and nine. 42. Baryta, sulphate of, or barytes, including barytes earth, C°’°‘* unmanufactured, one dollar and fifty cents per ton; manufactured, five dollars and twenty-five cents per ton. 43. Blues, such as Eerlin, Prussian, Chinese, and all others, containing ferrocyanide of iron, in pulp, dry or ground in or mixed with oil or water, eight cents iper lpound. 44. Blanc—iixe, or arti cia sulphate of barytes, and satin white, or artificial sulphate of lime, one-half of one cent per pound. 45. Black, made from bone, ivory, or vegetable substance, by whatever name known, including boneblack and lampblack, dry or ground in oil or water, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. 46. Chrome yellow, chrome green, and all other chromium colors in the manufacture of which lead and bichromate of potash or soda are used, in ulp, dry, or ground in or mixed with 011 or water, four and three-eiggrths cents per pound. 47. Ocher and ochery earths, sienna and sienna earths, and umber and umber earths, not specially provided for in this section, when crude or not (powdered washed or pulverized, one—eighth of one cent per poun ; if powdered, washed or pulverized, three-eighths of one cent per pormd; if ground in 011 or water, one cent per pound. 48. Ora e mineral, three and one—fourth cents per pound. 49. Rednézad, two and five-eighths cents pier pound. 50. Ultramarine blue, whether dry, in pu p, or mixed with water, and wash blue containing ultramarine, three,cents per pound. 51. Varnishes, including so-called gold size or japan, twenty-five Vmishen. per centum ad valorem ; enamel paints made with varnish, thirty-five per centum ad valorem; spirit vamish containing five per centum or more of methyl alcohol, t irty—1ive cents per ga lon and thirty-five per centum ad valorem; spirit varnish containing less than five er centum of methyl alcohol, one dollar and thirty-two cents per gallbn and thirty-five per centum ad valorem. 52. Vermilion reds, containinglquicksilver, dry or ground in oil or water, ten cents per pound; w en not containingjgriclmilver but madedof lead or containing lead, four and seven-erg ths cents per oun. P 53. Wlrite lead, and white pigment containing lead, dry or in pulp, or ground or mixed with oil, two and one—half cents per pound. 54. Vlihiting and Paris white, dry, 0ne—fourth of one cent per pound; ground in oil, or putty, one-half of one cent per pound. 55. Zinc, oxide of, and white pigment containing nine, but not con— taining lead, dry, one cent per dpound; ground in 011, one and threefourths cents per ound; sulfi of zmc white or white sulphide of zinc, one and one-lfourth cents per pound; chloride of zinc and sulphate of zinc, one cent per pound. 56. All paints, colors, pigments, stains, lalges, crayons, including *‘“‘“°‘·°*°- charcoal era ons or fusains, smalts and frostings, whether crude or diy or mixed): or ground with water or oil or with solutions other than o`, not otherwise specially provided for in this section, thirt per centum ad valorem; all glazes, fluxes, enamels, and colors usedy only