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ART. II. For and in consideration of the rights and privileges granted by the United States of America in the preceding article of this Convention, and as an equivalent therefor, His Majesty the King of the Hawaiian Islands, hereby agrees to admit all the articles named in the following schedule, the same being the growth, manufacture, or produce of the United States of America, into all the ports of the Hawaiian Islands free of duty.

Schedule. Agricultural implements; animals; beef, bacon, pork, ham, and all fresh, smoked or preserved meats; boots and shoes; grain; flour, meal, and bran, bread and breadstuffs, of all kinds; bricks, lime, and cement; butter, cheese, lard, tallow; bullion; coal; cordage, naval stores including tar, pitch, resin, turpentine raw and rectified; copper and composition sheathing; nails and bolts; cotton and manufactures of cotton, bleached and unbleached, and whether or not colored, stained, painted, or printed; eggs; fish and oysters, and all other creatures living in the water, and the products thereof; fruits, nuts, and vegetables, green, dried or undried, preserved or unpreserved; hardware; hides, furs, skins, and pelts, dressed or undressed; hoop iron, and rivets, nails, spikes, and bolts, tacks, brads or sprigs; ice; iron and steel and manufactures thereof; leather, lumber and timber of all kinds, round, hewed, sawed, and unmanufactured, in whole or in part; doors, sashes, and blinds; machinery of all kinds, engines and parts thereof; oats and hay; paper, stationery, and books, and all manufactures of paper or of paper and wood; petroleum and all oils for lubricating and illuminating purposes; plants, shrubs, trees, and seeds; rice; sugar, refined or unrefiued; salt; soap; shooks, staves, and headings; wool and manufactures of wool, other than ready-made clothing; wagons and carts for the purposes of agriculture or of drayage; wood and manufactures of wood, or of wood and metal except furniture either upholstered or carved, and carriages;

In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand, and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed.

Done at the city of Washington this third day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and seventy-five, and of the Independence of the United States, the ninetyninth.

[SEAL.]

By the President:

U. S. GRANT.

HAMILTON FISH,

Secretary of State.

AN ACT to carry into effect a Convention between the United States of America and His Majesty the King of the Hawaiian Islands, signed on the thirtieth day of January, eighteen hundred and seventy-five.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That whenever the President of the United States shall receive satisfactory evidence

that the legislature of the Hawaiian Islands have passed laws ou their part to give full effect to the provisions of the Convention between the United States and His Majesty the King of the Hawaiian Islands, signed on the thirtieth day of January, eighteen hundred and seventy-five, he is hereby authorized to issue his proclamation declaring that he has such evidence; and thereupon, from the date of such proclamation, the following articles, being the growth and manufacture or produce of the Hawaiian Islands, to wit, arrowroot; castor-oil; bananas; nuts; vegetables, dried and undried, preserved and unpreserved; hides and skins, undressed; rice; pulu; seeds; plants; shrubs, or trees; muscovado, brown, and all other unrefined sugar, meaning hereby the grades of sugar heretofore commonly imported from the Hawaiian Islands, and now known in the markets of San Francisco and Portland as "Sandwich Island sugar; syrups of sugar-cane, melada, and molasses; tallow, shall be introduced into the United States free of duty so long as the said Convention shall remain in force.

Approved, August 15, 1875.

1. As to when Hawaiian sugars are dutiable, see 1877, s. s. 3262.

2. The expression "Hides" does not permit the free entry of wool on the skin under this treaty. 1877, s. s. 3414.

3. Material composing any manufacture for free entry under this treaty must consist of the growth or production of the Islands. 1879, s. s. 4202.

4. Molasses shipped from Honolulu to a foreign port, and thence to the United States, is not entitled to free entry. 1886, s. s. 7428.

5. Sugar-cane cannot be considered as a vegetable, preserved or unpreserved, nor as unrefined sugar, and is not free under this treaty. 1886, s. s. 7734.

6. Guava jelly is not free under this treaty. 1888, s. s. 9043.

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INDEX.

The references in the margin are to pages.

The references not in margin are to paragraphs of the schedules, or to sections of the Revised Statutes, as indicated.

In consulting the Index, look

1. For the name of the article;

2. Under the material of which it is composed;

3. If of more than one material, then under the material of chief value, prominence or characteristic quality.

4. For Warehouse, Entry, Invoice, Drawback, &c., under those titles

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Academies. See Societies.

Acetates

Lead, brown (53)................

white (54)....

Acetoni (102, n.).

Acid stibic (594, 10).

Acids

rollers (95, 7)....

unmounted (95, 6)..

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8 Alabaster statuary, etc., for societies (759)...145 8 Alabaster statuary and ornaments (394)..... 95 20 Alabaster in blocks (467, 3)...............113 .126 Albata, or German silver, unmfd. (185)...... 40 Albumen, in any form or condition (496)....122

Acetic, acetous or pyroligneous (12)...... 6 Albums (384, 13, 91; 385, 2, 3, 92; 388, 1;

Carbolic, as a disinfectant (594, 3)........126

for mfg. vinegar (12, n.)........

Bromo-flurescic (82, 11, 15)..

for chemical or mfg. pps. (594)..

dry or other, med. (594, 7)..

93

20

94 per cent. anhydrous alcohol (102)...... 20 distilled spirits, 50 per cent. anhydrous al

cohol (101).....

Alcoholic compounds (103)...

463)..

Alcohol, amylic (112)..

20

20

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(649, 7)......

American artists' paintings, statuary, foun-

.155

tains, and other works of art (819)....155
who are American artists (819, notes).....155
what are "works of art" (819, notes)..
bags exp. filled and returned empty (649,
24, 25, 26, 34, 35, 42)....
bottles exp. empty and rtd. filled (649, 22). 132
barrels returned empty (648)..

car wheels, worn-out, re-impt. (649, 3, 14,
38, 43)......

fisheries, spermaceti, whale and other fish-
oils, and products of such fisheries
(749) ....

.132

Anodynes. See Preparations.
Anti-fouling comp. for painting ships' bot-
toms (87, 7)...

Antimony as regulus or metal (195)......
ore, cr., sulphide of (600)...
Antioxide, as varnish (119, 9)...
Antiquities, collections of (669).....
Antiseptic gauze (93, 4).

12

42

.126

22

.....136

Ants' egrs..

15
..160

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.132

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.131

..144

mfs.: casks, barrels, carboys, bags, and
other vessels, returned filled with for-
eign products (649).....

paper, printed and engraved (649, 20, 29,

Appraisers, merchant......

certificate; effect of (§ 2950)..
Appraisal. §§ 2899-2953.

ports where there is no appraiser (§ 2609). 172
no delivery before appraisal (§ 2899)......178
delivery to storehouse under bond (§ 2899)178
importer's addition to invoice value

($ 2900).......

importer's addition, when to be made

(§ 2900, 15, 48)....

.179

.......180
penalty of 20 per cent., when imposed

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