Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 30.djvu/209

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170 FIFTY -I*‘IF'1‘H CONGRESS. Sess. l. Ch. 11. 1897. $¤¤¤'·¤-¤ G- broken which will pass througn a sieve known commercially m€.gT.Y§`lt°’$.i¤K¤r:aQ as number twelve wire sieve, one-fourth of one cent per pound; °°"**”“°'£m paddy, or rice having the outer hull on, three-fourths of one cent per pound. ’ 233. Rye, ten cents per bushel; rye ilour, one-half of one cent per pound. 234. Wheat, twenty-tive cents per bushel. 235. Wheat flour, twenty-five per centum ad valorem. Deirrvrvducts- Dum! Pnonuccrsz 236. Butter, and substitutes therefor, six cents per pound. 237. Cheese, and substitutes therefor, six cents per pound. 238. Milk, fresh, two cents per gallon. 239. Milk, preserved or condensed, or sterilized by heating or other processes, including weight of immediate coverings. two cents per pound; sugar of milk, five cents per pound. uggm •¤·*‘*·=·*·*1¤°*· Fam nm Fmmi Pnonnoms: ` 240. Beans, forty-five cents per bushel of sixty pounds. 241. Beans, pease, and mushrooms, prepared or preserved, in tins, jars, bottles, or similar packages, two and one—ha1f cents per pound, including the weight of all tins, jars, and other immediate coverings; allvegetables, prepared or preserved, including pickles and sauces of all kinds, not specially provided for in this Act, and nsh paste or sauce, forty per centum ad valorem. 242. Gabbages, three cents each. 243. Cider, five cents per gallon. 244. Eggs, not specially provided for in this Act, five cents per dozen. 245. Eggs, yolk of, twenty-five per centum ad valorem; albumen, egg or blood, three cents per pound; dried blood, when soluble, one and one-half cents per pound. 246. Hay, four dollars per ton. 247. Honey, twenty cents per gallon. 248. Hops, twelve cents per pound; hop extract and lupulin, fifty per centum ad valorcm. 249. Onions, forty cents per bushel; garlic, one cent per pound. 250. Pease, green, in bulk or in barrels, sacks, or similar packages, and seed pease, forty cents per bushel of sixty pounds; pease, dried, not specially provided for, thirty cents per bushel; split pease, forty cents per bushel of sixty pounds; pease in cartons, papers, or other small packages, one cent per pound. 251. Orchids, palms, dracsenas, crotons and azaleas, tulips, hyacinths, narcissi, jonquils, lilies, lilies of the valley, and all other bulbs, bulbous roots, or corms, which are cultivated tbr their tion ers, and natural iiowers of all kinds, preserved or fresh, suitable for decorative purposes, twentydive per centum ad valorem. 252. Stocks, cuttings or seedlings of Myrobolan plum, Mahaleb or Mazzard cherry, three years old or less, fifty cents per thousand plants and fifteen per centum ad valorem; stocks, cuttings or seedlings of pear, apple, quince and the St. Julien plum, three years old or less, and evergreen seedlings, one dollar per thousand plants and fifteen per centum ad valorem; rose plants, budded, grafted, or grown on their own roots, two and one-half cents each; stocks, cuttings and seedlings of all fruit and ornamental trees, deciduous and evergreen. shrubs and vines, manetti, multiilora, and brier rose, and all trees, shrubs, plants and vines, commonly known as nursery or greenhouse stock. not specially provided for in this Act, twentynve per centum ad valorem. 253. Potatoes, twenty-tive cents per bushel of sixty pounds.