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bound. Emery on paper or linen. Linseed or linseed meal and colza seed. Flax, raw. Earthenware, common, and faience, glazed or not, in articles of all forms not mentioned in other Classes. Walnut wood. Wood, fine, for musical instruments, furniture, &c Wood in sheets and laths for veneering. Wood, sawn, planed, or dovetailed. Lard and butter. Machines, reservoirs of galvanised iron, and apparatus not otherwise mentioned, not exceeding 1,000 kilogrammes in weight. When machines are imported with extra pieces, which, taken separately, are subject to a higher duty, the whole will be dutiable as machines if such pieces arrive in the same package. Mills of all kinds not specified in Class I. Ore of iron, copper, and tin, blacklead and asbestos. Alimentary preserves

Potatoes of all kinds and sizes. Paper of all kinds not otherwise mentioned, and serpentines or paper ribbons. Fish, pressed, salted, or smoked, not in tins. Lithographic stones; pumice stone; stones of all kinds and forms for grinding or whetting; fire-proof stones for blast furnace; filtering and other similar stones. Colours, common, prepared in oil. Pianos, including silent pianos. Saltpetre, saltnitre, and common or calcined potash. Leeches. Tallow, prepared, for the manufacture of stearine candles or stearine. Soda, common, or calcined. Carbonate of soda, crystallised. Sulphate of iron or green copperas. Sulphate of copper or blue-stone. Tissue or gauze of iron wire not otherwise mentioned, and wire hooks. Turpentine, common or of Venice, and paste or extract of logwood. Poison for preserving skins. Glass and crystal. Vinegar, common and empyreumatic, and brandy from the residues of pressed grapes. Wines of all kinds in casks, pipes, or barrels, and red wines, the product of any country, imported in casks, barrels, bottles, demijohns, and other recipients. When port wine, even red, is imported in bottles or demijohns, it shall be dutiable according to Class IV. Coffee winnowers. Sumach, powdered or not.

CLASS IV. GOODS WHICH PAY 75 CENTIMES OF THE BOlivar per

KILOGRAMME.

Linseed oil. Fish oil, other than cod-liver oil, and cottonseed oil. Palm oil, and painters or siccative oil. Olives and capers of all kinds. Oil or vinegar cruets, and water or wine decanters-other than those having any part of gold or silver (which come under Class VIII.), and those of German silver, or gilt or silvered (which are comprised in Class VI.). Articles of all kinds of steel, iron, copper, brass, tin, tin-plate, bell metal, bronze, lead, pewter, zinc and nickel, not otherwise mentioned, whether polished, varnished, tinned or bronzed, or not; and furnaces for the manufacture of sugar. Metallic wire, manufactured in frames for wigs, bird cages, racks for clothes or hats, and other similar articles, also frames for parasols and umbrellas. Almonds, hazelnuts, nuts, peanuts, chestnuts, and all dried fruits with shells not elsewhere specified. Stills and all similar apparatus. Siegert's bitters. Benneseed, canary seed, and millet. Aniseed and carraway seed; Ceylon and Chinese cinnamon garlic, cumin, origan, pepper, and other kinds of spices. Chandeliers, globes, shades, candelabra, candlesticks, beacons, street lamps, lamps, lanterns, hanging lamps, &c.-except those ornamented with gold or silver (which are included in Class VIII), and those of German silver, or gilt or silvered (which are taxed according to Class VI.) Accessories thereof imported with the above-mentioned articles shall pay duty according to the class to which they belong. Christmas trees. Jet, unmanufactured. Sugar, white or refined. Scales, Roman balances and weights of copper, or in which copper predominates, including weights, even of iron, when imported together with the scales. Wooden troughs or buckets. Billiard table cushions, and bands or belts of coarse oil cloth for steam engines. Bagatelle tables with all their accessories. Felt for hats, not fulled; hair for hats: paper wrappers; leather hat bands; linings; plush; peaks for caps and kepis, and other articles used exclusively in the manufacture of hats, such as oil-cloth prepared with gum-lac dissolved in alcohol employed in the manufacture of black felt hats, and solutions of the said gum in alcohol. Shoe blacking and bituminous oil for blacking and softening harness. Billiard tables with all their accessories, including the balls and cloth covers when imported together with the tables. Armenian bole and lees of lard and oil and all other fatty substances. Boxes of wood, even when imported in pieces, ie., in boards for making the same. Baskets, large or small, and hand baskets; small carriages for children, and other articles of osier and wicker work, including children's carriages, whatever be the material from which made; cotton canvas covered with paper for the manufacture of envelopes, and tissue coated with sulphate of copper. Pasteboard manufactured or prepared for boxes, large or small, or in any other form excepting for toys, masks, and playing cards. Blank visiting cards of any size are also included in this Class. Brushes for teeth, hair, clothes, and shoes.

Barley, husked or ground. "Cebadilla." Capsules for bottles. Brushes, common; horse brushes, and scrubbing brushes of horn or whalebone. Wax, vegetable, black or yellow, not prepared. Bristles and horsehair. Wooden horses or carrousels. Glue, common, and collodion for photographers. Linen, unbleached; and cloth called "coleta," unbleached, No. 2; linen coarser than that comprised in No. 119 of Class III., but which has been more or less bleached, including Indian taffeta. Pointed knives, common, with or without sheaths; knives with handles of wood or other common material for fishermen, shoemakers, saddlers, gardeners, and cigar-makers; large common knives for farming, and gene.. ally all those employed in arts and trades. Varnishes of all kinds. Caoutchouc made into tubes

or pipes. and in sheets or bands for machine belting. Oilcloth for floors, packing and roofing. Mirrors of all kinds and plate glass silvered. Spermaceti and paraffin. Mar," a substance used in making bread, and for other purposes. Mats, large and small, "Espuma de and matting for floors. Small table mats. Figures, ornaments, and articles of all kinds used in putting up confectionery; also gilt paper bags or cornucopias, finished or partly finished, imported for the above purpose. Should the receptacles referred to be covered with silk or velvet, or ornamented with flowers or other articles liable to higher duties, they shall, unless completely filled with sweetmeats, be dutiable under Class VI. as fancy articles. Carpets and door mats, not otherwise mentioned. Dried fruits. Fruits in brat dy, syrup, or in their juice. Saddle-trees. Artificial flowers of porcelain. Biscuits or crackers in the preparation of which sugar is employed. Gasoline and benzine. Gelatine of all kinds Potato, maize, and rye flour. Shoemakers' thread, and hemp rope for halters with core of tow. Coarse thread of hemp, and twisted lines or twine of the same material for fishing. Twine or cord. Tin plate and sheet iron manufactured into articles not elsewhere specified, and iron utensils for domestic use when they have lids or covers of tin plate or sheet iron. Incense. Tools used in the arts and trades, with or without handles, such as pincers, gravers, compasses, gimlets, trowels, and chisels of all kinds for carpenters, levels, gouges, jack-planes, adzes, rabbet plates, awls, files, hanımers, saws, tongs and pincers, lathes and vices, drawing knives, planes, bits, bitstocks, and other similar articles, together with the wooden boxes containing any of these instruments. Colour chalk for tailors. Syrups of all kinds, other than medicinal; confectionery of all kinds; sugar and flavoured rice flour employed for sweets. Sealing-wax in cakes or sticks. Wool, raw; coarse and medium sail cloth of hemp or cotton, unbleached. Condensed milk. Books printed and bound, except those mentioned in Class VIII. Faience in imitation of porcelain. Porcelain, common, and china in any form not elsewhere specified. Hops.

Wood manufactured into articles not otherwise mentioned. Copying-presses. Furniture of iron and wood. Marble, jasper, alabaster, granite and other similar stones, wrought or polished in articles not otherwise mentioned. Maizena. Wicks and twists for lamps, and lamp chimney cleaners. Mustard in the grain or in powder. Furniture of common wood and of osier, straw, or cane. Organs and all parts thereof imported separately. Ostein and oleomargarine. Wood in strips for making matches. Wooden sieves with bottoms of flax tissue. Paste or mastic for polishing, and that used for the tips of billiard cues. Wall paper. Compositions imitating porcelain, marble, granite, or any fine stone, in all kinds of articles, except toys for children. Paper for cigarettes not otherwise mentioned. Flints, touchstones, polishing and similar stones not included in other Classes. Hides, neither tanned nor prepared. Shovels made altogether of wood. Solders. Leather tips for billiard cues. Cheese of all classes. Sacks, empty, of canvas, osnaburg, unbleached thick linen, or other similar fabrics. Sausages and hams in tins; fish in tins. Surgical and dental instruments, and those for use in anatomy and science. Patent medicines. Mushrooms, dried or in sauce: lacteous flour and all other similar provisions, prepared or not, not included in the preceding Classes, such as Buitoni's agglutinated paste. Sauces of all kinds and pickles in mustard. Tallow, raw, rendered or pressed, and ordinary fats of all kinds for making soap. Syphons and machinery of all kinds for aërated waters. Sole leather, dyed or not, not worked, and hempen soles for andals ("alpargatas). Piano stools of whatever material. Talc in sheets or in powder. Horsehair fishing lines. Meat covers of wire gauze. Stoppers with heads of metal, glass, crystal, or porcelain. Tissues of cotton, hemp, esparto, or flax for floor coverings, even when mixed with a small quantity of wool, and horsehair tissues for covering furniture. Canvas prepared tor oil painting, and stumps for drawing. Tissues, common, of hemp, flax, or cotton for furniture, in bands, belts, or any other form; cotton dishcloths for domestic use, and straw ribbon for packing. Wooden heels shod or not with copper or iron. Strips of tinned stuff or paper, for shoemakers, of one centimetre in width and twelve centimetres in length. Bootjacks and corkscrews. Chalk in sticks, lumps, or other form, for billiards. Blinds, venetian, &c., for doors and windows. Firecrackers called "triquitraques" and pr mers for rockets. Rubber tube and hose, and bands for machinery. Sails of coarse twilled cloth for vessels. Tallow candles. Bicycles. Glass and crystal manufactured in any form, not elsewhere mentioned. Wines of whatever origin when imported in demijohns or bottles, excepting red wines, which are taxed under Class III. Port wine, even red, imported in demijohns or bottles shall be included in Class IV. Articles of gypsum of all kinds, excepting toys. Rings and buckles covered with leather.

CLASS V. GOODS WHICH PAY I BOLIVAR AND 25 CENTIMES OF A

BOLIVAR PER KILOGRAMME.

Oil of sesame, benneseed oil, castor oil, oil of almonds, cod liver oil, and all other oils not otherwise mentioned. Perfumed oils and soaps. Arsenic. Tartaric acid in powder. Liquid ammonia. Toilet waters and hair washes, such as floriline and the like, and waters for cleaning metals. Spirits, of all kinds, brandy or cognac and its essence up to 22 deg. Cartier, Above this degree they shall pay duty at proportional rates. Bitters not otherwise specified, such as the Elixir bitters of cocaine, are included in this class. Peeled almonds. Apparatus for measuring hats. Photographic apparatus and the tools used for making the same, if not included in other classes. Shapes for gummed stuff for hats,

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bonnets, and caps. Strops and fine stones for sharpening razors, and razor paste. Saffron. Quicksilver. Trunks, travelling sacks, bags, valises, and portmanteaus of all kinds. Skins for carrying wine, and purses, and small bags of oil cloth for grain samples. Bandages, bougies or probes, trusses, lint, strainers or filters, sucking bottles and nipples, breast pumps, cupping glasses, anodyne necklaces, spatulas, lances, retorts, clyster pumps, syringes of all kinds, and syphons not otherwise mentioned. "Bramante (unbleached tissue), "brin," ticks, drills, domestic cloth, "liencello," "platilla," "warandol," or Irish linen, unbleached, of linen or cotton, and other similar unbleached tissues, including those with coloured stripes or patterns, provided that the ground be unbleached, and holland of black or blue thread. Brushes and paint brushes of all kinds. Flat cases of leather. Almanacks of all kinds. Cameræ obscuræ or cameræ lucidæ, for drawing or photography, and other similar apparatus. Cotton canvas for embroidering, and canvas of unbleached thread similar to the light tissues used for mosquito nets, Capsules, sacks or bags of paper, of all kinds and sizes, with or without inscription, for pharmaceutical purposes. Tortoise-shell, crude. Homespun linen; white linen, called "coleta": "lienzo de rosa" ; camel-hair cloth; cotton cretonne and linen cretonne, known as unbleached German dowlas, Nos. 9, 10, and 11; ining (“crehuela") striped or checked, coloured or not; and all other similar tissues not mentioned in other Classes. Sieves of copper wire. leather, wood, or horsehair. White wax, pwe or mixed, not wrought, and mineral wax. Bristles for shoemakers. Fish glue and liquid glue for shoemakers. Colours and paints not otherwise mentioned, such as ultramarine and kalsomine; earths of different colours, and paints prepared with oil to be used for enamel. Cork, in sheets, stoppers, and in any other shape. Lasting for uppers of shoes. Amethyst (quartz). Cubebs. Penknives, razors, scissors, and jack knives; table knives and forks not otherwise mentioned--except those with handles plated with gold or silver (which are dutiable under Class VIII.), and those of German silver, or silvered or gilt (which are comprised in Class VI.).

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Co ds, single or wound with thread. Beer, concentrated, Sassafras, and all other medicinal barks. Cotton drills, white or coloured, and cotton flannel, white or coloured; cotton batiste, and the fulled cloth used for bath and face towels. Drugs, medicines, and chemical products not otherwise mentioned; also all vermifuges and medicinal articles of substances, such as carbonate of soda, beef wine, cardamon seeds and plants, and Bisleri quinine wine. Oil cloths of all kinds, other than those used for floors, packing, or roofing, comprised in Class IV. Cotron buckram. Brooms, large and small, and horsehair brooms. Essences and extracts of all kinds, not otherwise mentioned. Sponges. Stereoscopes, cosmoramas, dioramas, panoramas, magic lanterns, and other similar apparatus. Paper lanterns; paper collars, fronts, and cuffs, including those lined with stuff; and manufac tured paper not otherwise mentioned. Foils, masks, breast-plates, and boxing-gloves, Phosphorus in paste. Photographs. Cotton blankets. Woollen blankets, white or with coloured fringes, ard dark blankets of goats' hair. Gum-lac, copal. and all kinds of gums and resins not otherwise mentioned. Horsehair gloves and fencing gloves. Glycerine. Ordinary sewing thread; untwisted thread for embroidering, and thread of one strand for weaving. Loadstone. Figures and statuettes and mechanical mannikins of life size. Musical instruments and boxes, and all accessories thereof, excepting organs and pianos. Soap, white, marbled, called "Castille" or "Marseilles." Soap, common, or powder, and rock salt for animals. Sets of chessmen, draughts, dominoes, roulette, and similar games; playing cards of all sorts. Pictures and engravings on paper. Blank books, crayons, and charcoal pencils for drawing; notebooks and portfolios; lithographed receipt books; pencils of all kinds, except slate pencils; rubber erasers; wafers and stamps for letters; writing ink and ink powder; paper knives; pencil cases; sealing-wax and wafers; sand: steel pens; penholders; inkstands, and all other stationery, with the exception of envelopes and articles containing gold and silver. Books containing gold or silver leaf, whether real or imitation, for gilding or silvering; bronze in powder, and books for bronzing. Liquor stands, empty. Liencillo," brin, ard domestic tissues of linen or cotton, Iron filings. Striped tissues, "arabias," and ginghams of linen or cotton, common, i̟.., such as have only 13 strands in the warp or woof of each square of 5 millemetres. Wooden battens, mouldings, and cornices, painted, varnished, gilt or silvered, and wooden curtain loop holders. Coloured cotton duck Sweet liqueurs such as cherry cordial, creams of vanilla, cocoa, and the like. Madapolam, hollands, Brittany, domestic, sheeting, Irish, white or coloured; cretonne, "elefante," 'platilla,' liencillo," Rouen" calico, "savaje." of cotton and other similar tissues. Frames of any material with or without glasses, and whether or not containing portraits, pictures or engravings. Masks of all kinds. Maccaroni, "tallarines," vermicelli, and other similar alimentary pastes. Tape measures of leather, linen, or paper, with or without cases. Furniture of fine wood, snch as mahogany, rosewood, walnut, &c.; ditto ditto, with backs and seats upholstered with horsehair, wool, cotton, or silk; furniture of common wood, gilded; and coffins of all kinds. Gall nuts, nutmegs, and mace. Shades of paper, metal, or tissue. Gum pastilles or drops of all kinds. Perfumery of all kinds. Parchment and imitations of the same, in articles not otherwise. mentioned; cloth only used for bookbinding, and waterproof tissues of caoutchouc and cotton used for blankets and overcoats; cotton felt for lithographic machines. Aerome:ers and liquor gaugs of all kinds, and alcoholometers. Paintings, chromos, drawings and for. traits on canvas wood, paper, stone, or other materials: lithographed advertisements applied on cardboard and christening cards with coloured landscapes or figures. Tissue paper,

1293

Bottle and glass stands. Gunpowder. Tobacco, cut for cigarettes. Tannin. Tea and vanilla. Indian ink for marking, and all kinds of ink not otherwise mentioned; also hair dyes. Candles of spermaceti, paraffin, composition, or stearine, and twisted wicks for the same. Dowlas, unbleached, of linen or cotton, even with coloured stripes or flowers; also that with a grey or light yellow ground. Tinder boxes and flints, and wicks for tinder boxes. Buttons of all kinds except of silk, silver, or gold: Toilet face powders.

CLASS VI.- GOODS WHICH PAY DUTY OF 2 BOLIVARS AND
50 CENTIMES PER KILOGRAMME.

Bugles and beads of glass, porcelain, steel, wood, or of any other material excepting gold and silver; coffin ornaments; fancy articles of glass or porcelain mounted in gilt or silvered metal; artificial plants of caoutchouc; paper or tissue, manufactured to imitate palmis, begonias and large leaves; and sweet meat boxes covered with silk or velvet or ornamented with flowers or other articles liable to higher duties than those leviable under Class IV. Steel hoops for crinolines or bustles. Damasks, drills, Brittany cloth, unbleached cloth ("bramante"), ticks, dowlas excepting unbleached German dowlas Nos. 9, 10, and 11 specified in Class V.; "estopilla," estrepe," florete,' garantido," Irish linen, "platilla," calico, and white or dyed dowlas of linen, pured or mixed with cotton. Pins, needles, eyelets, hooks and eyes, clasps, hairpins, hooks for clothes and shoes, and zinc clasps for shoes; buckles for hats, waistboats, trousers, and shoes, except those of gold or silver. Carpets in the piece and rugs. Vests, scarves, bonnets, socks, drawers, trousers, stockings, and slip bodices of knitted cotton and similar tissues. [Camisoles with collars and cuffs attached, or made to be worn wi h separate collars and cuffs, shall be liable to a surtax of 50 per cent.] Spectacles, opera glasses, telescopes, eye glasses, magnifying glasses and microscopes, except those mounted in gold and silver, including glasses and lenses for spectacles, &c., imported separately. Whalebone and its imitations. Basil and tanned skins not manufactured, except the white or dyed leather specified in Class IV. Barometers, hygrometers, thermometers, octants, and other similar instruments, and compasses of all kinds. Canes and loaded canes, whips, slung shots, and other defensive articles, with the exception of sword sticks or sticks containing mechanism for firing which are included in Class VII. Baize or ratteen in pieces or plaids, and blankets made of these materials. Pipe bowls, cigar holders and pipes of amber, porcelain, or any other material, except those of gold and silver and similar materials men. tioned in Class III. Shaving boxes with accessories; work-boxes, and travelling cases. Shells, even when made up into ornaments. Pocketbooks; cigar and cigarette cases: card cases; purses; tobacco ponches; spectacle cases: match boxes; albums not covered with velvet' nor gilt nor silvered; and all other similar articles except those having any part of gold or silver. Wax, manufactured into articles of all kinds, except toys. Counterpanes, sheets, plaids, hammocks, table covers, of linen or cotton. Elastic for shoes. Coral in articles of all kinds, except when set in gold or silver. Funeral wreaths and other funeral articles.

Thin cord for weaving and all other twisted thread in the shape of cord, such as binding or sal thread, white or coloured, which cannot on account of its elasticity, be assimilated to cord and can be used in the manufacture of hand or machine-made tissues. Crinolines, bustles, and similar articles and caoutchouc dress shields whether covered or not. Knives and forks with handles of German silver or white metal or silvered gilt. Mattresses, pillows, palliasses and cushions, except those of silk; feathers for stuffing the same, and woven wire mattresses. Cotton cords for hammocks. Damasks, “coqui," bombazine, “bordon," padding, ticking, "mahon," nankeen, light nankeen, "estrepe," quilting, sateen, "tangep' muslin, of cotton, white or coloured, and other similar cotton tissues not mentioned in other or stiff Classes. Dynamite. Thimbles, except those of gold or silver, and artificial teeth and eyes. Skirts, petticoats, dressing gowns, nightdresses and chemises of cotton, made up or cut out, and cotton stuff shaped for shirts, with or without embroidered bands. Articles of German or white metal and its imitations, such as trays, dishes, curbs, bits, muzzles, spurs, stirrups, hinges, buckles, chandeliers, lamps, candelebra, and other similar articles. Articles of iron or other metals, gilt or silvered, with the exception of stationery requisites, which will always be included in Class V., even when gilt or silvered. Worsted yarns, raw, and yarns of goats' hair. Cases containing small articles of steel, copper, or other metals, for embroidering, for cleaning the teeth, or nails, or for drawing and painting. Brooms and brushes of palms, rusues, or other vegetable fibres.

Felt in pieces for saddle cloths. Blankets or quilts of wool, pure or mixed with cotton, and with ground of one or more colours. Tissues for slippers, excepting of silk. Elastic for shoes. Gutta percha, manufactured or not, and elastic shoes. Imitation gold or silver thread, purl, spangles, tinsel, leaf foil, galloons, trimmings, small wares, and other articles of imitation gold or silver for embroidering. Bone, ivory, mother-of-peal, real and imitation tortoiseshell, caoutchouc, indiarubber, sheets of celluloid, horn, and talc, manufactured in articles of all kinds not otherwise mentioned, with the exception of children's toys comprised in Class III., and exclusive of articles combined with gold or silver, which are included in Class VIII. Table cloths, towels and napkins of all kinds. Sheeting of pure linen or mixed with cotton, Hands, keys. springs, spirals, and other parts of watch and clock movements,

1294

THE SHIPPING WORLD YEAR BOOK.

excepting those of gold and silver, which are included in Class VIII. Wicks, and cotton slightly spun for wicks. Cotton handkerchiefs not exceeding one metre in width Paper, gilt or silvered, paper stamped in relief, and coloured paper for artificial flowers. Umbrellas, sunshades and parasols of wool, linen, or cotton. Imitation pearls and stones, not set or set in any metal except gold or silver. Rice and other toilet powders such as calcined Persian snail-shell. Powder puffs are also included in this Class. White metal or German silver, in articles of all kinds not otherwise mentioned. Goose quills, prepared as tooth picks. Feather dusters. Imitation jewellery. Table or wall clocks, alarm clocks, water clocks, hour glasses, and all other similar articles with the exception of watches and also of tower clocks imported by the Federal Government. Hats, caps, hat frames, and bonnets of straw or its imitations, not trimmed. Patent leather, not manufactured. Tobacco, unmanufactured, or twisted for chewing, and cigarette paper. Dowlas (“warandol), white, of linen or of linen mixed with cotton. Chintz, nainsook, calicoes, cretonnes, tarlatans, cambrics, fine French striped cloth, and other fine tissues which have more than 13 threads in the warp or woof in a square of five millimetres; poplins, "malvinas," Japanese cloths, lustring, coloured percales, and any other coloured cotton cloths, similar to the above, and not otherwise mentioned under different Classes, such as cotton merinos. Fans of all kinds. &c.

CLASS VII. GOODS WHICH PAY 5 BOLIVARS PER KILOGRAMME. Opera cloaks of wool, or of wool mixed with cotton. Undershirts of linen, or of linen mixed with cotton. Sword sticks, and sticks wih mechanism for firing. Purs: s of linen or cotton. Stockings, socks, fringes, tassels, laces ribbons, bands, tapes, trimmings, plushes, caps, mantles, capes, waistbands, bows, epaulettes, list shoes, gloves, of wool or of wool mixed with cotton. Boots and shoes, only cut out or without soles, and rugs of sheepskin. Shirts, made up, of cotton and having no parts of linen. Woven uppers for sandals. Rugs, carpets, and all crocheted articles, except those of silk. Chasubles, viaticum cases, altar cloths, copes, dalmaticas, stoles, maniples, communion cloths, bands, and other ecclesiastical vestments and church ornaments. Cigarettes rolled in paper or maize leaf. Cravats of cotton, hair, or wool. Curtains, hangings and mosquito nets, of linen or cotton. Braces, corsets, slip bodices, corset covers, and garters of all kinds. Skirts, dressing gowns, night gowns, petticoats, pillow slips, and chemises of linen or of linen mixed with cotton, except those of holland batiste or of linen or "clarin or mixed with cotton, which are comprised in Class VIII. Lace, embroidered bands, blonds, edgings, ribbon borders, epaulettes, tassels, cords, fringes, scarves, braids, gloves, and trimmings of linen or cotton. Swords, sabres, daggers, fine bunting knives, blunderbusses, pistols, revolvers, guns, muskets, rifles, cannon, carbines, and other fire-arms for artillery and infantry, including proje tiles, pe cussion caps, nipples, gun-locks, cartridges loaded or empty, and everything relating to side or fire-arms and compressed air guns. Pyrotechnic or Bengal lights. Fireworks. Horse cloths and, horse b'ankets of all kinds. Stockings of linen or of linen mixed with cotton, and stockings of Scotch twisted yarn. Shot bags, powder flasks, cap boxes, and game bags. Muslins; crépon of cotton, coloured; lawn; cotton gauze, called "rengue"; barege; grenadine: organdy; zephyr; very fine linen cloth known as "clarin"; "dulce sueno"; tarlatan; "imité"; batiste of holland; cotton batiste; white or coloured, plain, worked, transparent or embroidered, in pieces or cut out for dresses; and all other dresses; and all other tissues similar to the above and not included in other classes. Muslins and batistes of linen, or of linen mixed with other materials, unbleached or coloured, in pieces or cut out for clothes. Cotton velvet ("panilla "), cotton plush, and imitation velvet, in pieces or ribbons. Fine and common woollen cloth, cassimere, cassinette, muslin, satin, knitted goods, flannel, "lanilla," bombazine, alpaca, crape merino, scrge, lasting, damask, and all other tissues of wool, or of wool mixed with cotton, not mentioned in other Classes, unless made up into wearing apparel, which would bring them under Class IX. Shawls, foulards, large and small, of muslin; lawn knitted goods or other fine cotton tissues, and tissues made of ramie or of cotton mixed with this fibre. Handkerchiefs, shawls, large and small, foulards, table cloths, and undershirts of wool or of wool mixed with cotton, neither ornamented nor embroidered with silk. Umbrellas, sunshades, and parasols, of silk, or of silk mixed with wool or cotton. Skins, tanned, manufactured in any shape, not mentioned in other Classes Guipure or tulle of cotton or pita. Saddles, head-stals, gun cases and pistol holsters, reins, girths, cruppers, and sheepskin horse covers of all kinds. Tobacco, raw, and tobacco

stalks.

CLASS VIII. GOODS WHICH PAY 10 BOLIVARS PER KILOGRAMME, Ornaments and nets for head dress of all kinds. Human hair and its imitations, worked or not. Shirts, made up, of linen or wool, or of cotton with parts of linen; trousers, jackets, blouses, waistcoats, drawers, coats, overcoats, vests, and all other ready-made clothes, of linen or cotton, for men, not mentioned in other classes. Collars, shirt-fronts, and cuffs of linen or cotton, for men and women. Hammocks, netted, of all kinds. Skirts, petticoats, pillow slips, and chemises of batiste or light linen tissue (“clarin"), pure or mixed with cotton." Flowers and fruits, artificial, not otherwise mentioned, and materials for making flowers, with the exception of coloured paper comprised in Class VI

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