Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 50 Part 2.djvu/520

 1428 INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENTS OTHER THAN TREATIES Schedule I-Contd. SCHEDULE I-Continued Maximum Rates of Duty. Specific Nicaraguan Tariff Item Rates in Nicaraguan Number Description of Articles Cordobas 896 Electric and electrotechnical machinery, apparatus and appliances (a) Dynamos, generators, generating sets, alternators, motors and similar machinery n. o. p. Free Ex 896(a)bis Dry and wet batteries, including storage, wet cell, dry cell, radio, flashlight, and all other batteries, and parts Ad valorem 10% Ex 896 (b) Radio transmitting and receiving equip- ment and parts, including wireless tele- phone, telegraph, and television apparatus Ad valorem 15% Ex 904 Typewriters and parts Ad valorem 10% 956 Hog lard and other lard of animal origin, however packed N. K. .10 964 Wheat Flour 100 N. K. 2. 10 987 Raisins, dates, figs, prunes, and similar pressed fruits, including dried apples, peaches, apricots and pears N. K. .12 990 Beans, dried 100 N. K. 1. 00 1042 Fruits, preserved in their own juice, in syrup, or in water, in any container N.K. .08 Ex 1073 Condensed milk or cream N. K. .07 Ex 1073 Evaporated milk or cream N. K. .04 Ex 1073 Dried whole milk or cream N. K. .10 Ex 1073 Dried skimmed milk or cream N. K. .07 1078 Preserved vegetables of all kinds (other than pickled) not otherwise provided for, in any container N. K. .10 1082 (a) Rubber tires, combined or not with other materials, and inner tubes, for wheels of all kinds of vehicles except solid rubber tires for trucks N. K. .30 Ex 1082 (j) Rubber heels N. K. .15 NOTE I. It is agreed that the Nicaraguan Government will not impose any certification requirement or any formality for the importation, registration, licensing and sale of pharmaceutical specialties and patent medicines which are impossible of fulfillment in the United States because of the lack of a duly authorized federal agency. This clause does not affect the obligations assumed by Nicaragua in multi- lateral treaties and especially those relating to the manufacture and traffic in narcotic drugs, i. e., convention and protocols for the suppression of the abuse of opium and other drugs, signed at The Hague January 23, 1912; international opium convention, signed at Geneva February 19, 1925, and the convention and protocol for limiting the manufacture and regulating the distribution of narcotic drugs, signed at Geneva July 13, 1931.

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