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MAY COME IN.

SPECIFIED LIST.

SCHEDULE OF GOODS.

PROVISION FOR IMPORTS.

JULY-DECEMBER. BASIS.

In the following list is shown a schedule of goods for which licenses may be issued to the exteat of the value of similar goods imported from the same country of origin during the period July to December 31, 1938:—

Tariff Item Nα. I—Live animals, etc. 2—Animals, food for, of all kinds, ne i etc. 5 (2) —Bran or pollard. 9 —Seeds, viz., canary, grass seed, hemp seed, etc. 15—Cocoa-beans, raw. 17—Coffee, raw. 23—Tea in bulk, etc. 24—Tea, n.e.i. ex 31 —Cocoa or cacao butter. ex 32 (2) —Medicated confectionery. 40 (1) —Fruit trees and plants, etc. 41 —Glucose, grape sugar and caramel. 43—Infants' and invalids' foods, etc. 44—Gluten flour. 52 (1) —Almonds and nuts, all kinds,, etc. 52 (3) —Desiccated coconut, etc. 52 (4) —Walnuts, etc. 58—Soy, and catsup, In vessels over 10 gallons. s!)—Passover bread ; altar bread. 62—Rice, dressed or undressed, etc. 64—Salt. 65 (1) —Spices, unground, viz., cinnamon,

etc. ' 65 (2) —Spices, ungroundj n.e.i. ex67—Arrowroot. ex7o (1) —Sugar, n.e.i. 70 (2)— Molasses. 71—Treacle or molasses, mixed with bone black, etc. 81 (i) —Tobacco, unmanufactured, etc. 85—Spirits for fortifying New Zealand wines, etc. 88 —Spirits wholly denatured in New Zealand, etc. 89—Spirit for use in hospitals, etc. 92—Acid, acetic, n.e.i. : acetic pnhydride. ex 95 —Acids, etc. (except sulphuric). 96—Anti-incrustation, boiler, and other similar compounds. 97—Bacteriological products, etc. 100—Chloroform, ethyl, ether, etc. 101—Cream of Tartar, etc. pxlO2 (2) —Asphalt and bitumen. 103—Dextrine, n.e.i. > ex!o4—Sheep dip; weed and scrub killing

preparations. exlOo—Drugs and chemicals, viz., acetone, etc. -(except hydrogen peroxide in vessels under 1 gallon and colloidal sulphur).

106—Drugs and chemicals and other sabstances, etc. 107—Drugs and chemicals, etc., for culture media, etc. 10S—Diugs, crude, not powdered, etc. 109—Drugs, crude, viz., Carrageen or Irish Moss. 11Q—Dyes, manufactured, etc. 114—Essences, synthetic, viz., amyl acetate, 111—Dyeing materials, n.e.i. 115—EssenVial oils. 116 (3)— Gases, liquefied or compressed, n.e.i. 117—Glycerine, crude or refined. 118—Gums and resins, etc. 120 (1) —Insulin, etc. 120 (2)—lnsulin substitutes, etc. 120 (3) —Vitamins, vitamin concentrates, etc. exl2l (1) —Medicinal preparations (except wines), containing 50 per cent of proof spirit or less; medicinal preparations, drugs, n.e.i. 121 (2) —Medicinal preparations, n.e.i., packed in, etc. 122—Medicinal preparations (except medicated wines), containing more than 50 per cent proof 123—Metal workers' surface and case-hard-ening compounds, etc exl24 —Metallic elements, n.e.i., etc. (ex-, cept calcium hydroxide). - 130—Saccharin in form of tablets, etc. 131—Saccharin, n.e.i., etc. 132—Sheep and cattle-licks. 134 (1) —Surgeons', etc., appliances for wear, etc. 134 (2) —Surgical and dental instruments, etc. 134 (3) —Surgeons*, etc., materials, etc. 135—Scientific, etc., instruments and apparatus. 140—Corn sacks, wool packs, etc 141—Battery blanket, etc. 143—Braids and binding, all kinds, n.e.i., except cords, etc. 144—Brattice cloth of jute or hessian. 146—Buttons, crochet and similar. 147 —Buttons, a.e.i. 14S—Collar check, etc. 149—Cotton, raw. 152—Elastics, all kinds, etc. 153—Feathers, ornamental, etc. oxlos—Felt piece goods, n.e.i., etc. (except carpeting felt). 156—Felted textiles, etc., industrial purposes, etc. 157 (1) —Flags, viz., the Union Jack, etc. 160 (1) —Furs, skins, green or sun-dried. 163—Hairpins, hatpins, safety pins and toilet pins. exl64 and exl7o—Hat hoods, woven and similar, of straw, hemp, etc., unblocked. 165—Hat hoods, felt, of wool or fur, etc. 166—Hatmakers' materials, viz., hatters' ribbons, etc. 167—Kiln cloth, of horsehair, etc. 169—Leather cloth and oil baize, etc. 171—Wadding; pins, n.e.i.; knitting pins, etc. 172—Printers' blanketing, etc. exl74—Sewing cottons, etc., except mending yarns of wool. 175—Silk for flour dressing in the piece. 176—Oiled silk in the piece. 177—Staymakers' corset fasteners, etc. 178 (1) —Tailors' trimmings, viz., hair cloths, etc. 178 (2) —Tailors' trimmings, viz., silesias, etc. exlSO (1) —Silk piece goods, woven. exlßo (1) —Moquettes, tapestry and tick- : ings of cotton, etc. Exlßo (1) —Jute, hemp, and hessian piece goods imported from India. 180 (2) —Knitted, etc., piece goods of silk, etc. 183 (1) —Moquette and tapestry of wool or

containing wool. IS6—Umbrella makers' materials, etc. 187 —Union textiles n.e.i. in the piece, etc. 188—Upholsterers' materials, etc. 190—Waterproof material in the piece, etc. 11)1—Yarn—viz., coir, flax, jute and hemp. 192—Yarns of cottons, silk, etc. 194—Belts and belting n.e.i., etc. 195—Boots, shoes, etc., namely, children's 0-9 inclusive. 198 (1) —Boot protectors. 198 (8) —Cork soles, sock soles, etc. 198 (4) —Heel plates and toe plates. 198 (5) —Nails, etc., peculiar to use in bootmaking. 19g ((;) —Shoemakers' binding and beading. 198 (7) —Shoemakers' wax and heel balls. 198 (8) —Wooden heels, plain, etc. 198 (i))— Grindery, n.e.i. 200 (1) —Bookbinders' leather, etc. 200 (3) —Goat-skins and kid-skins, etc. 200 (4) (a) —Hide leathers, crust or rough tanned, but undressed. 200 (4) (b) —Kangaroo skins, etc., but undressed. 200 (5) —Hog skins. 200 (6) (b) —Patent leathers. Ex2oo (8) —Leather n.e.i., etc. (except sole leather n.e.i.). 200 (9) —Parchment or vellum made from skins. 205 (2) —Rubber gloves n.e.i. 205 (3) —Rubber or gutta percha solutions and cements. Ex2os (6) (a) —Moulded rubber strip suited for the repair of such tyres. 205 (8) —Rubber valves and teats for feeding bottles, etc. • 207—Tanners, etc., inks and stains. 210 —Jars or other dutiable vessels, etc. 211 (3) —Refractory materials, n.e.i., etc. 211 (4) —Fireclay ground n.e.i. Ex2l3—"White cement." 217—Eyes, artificial. 218—Flooring, wall, hearth and garden

tiles. 219 —Glass sheets, common window, etc. 220—Glass, plate and sheet, etc. 221 —Glass plates (engraved) for photolithographic work. Ex222—"Armourplate" or toughened safety glass. 223—Glass cloches or bells, etc. 224 —Glass rods, tubes or tubing, plain. Ex 225 —Globes and chimneys for lamps, n.e.i., lamps, lanterns and lampwick, n.e.i. 226 —Lamps, miners* safety, etc. E227 —Lenses, all kinds, etc. Ex 229 (1) —Marble in the rough. Ex 229 (2) —Granite, or other stone n.e.i., in the rough, including scabbled from 229 (6) —Slates, specially suited for billiard tables. 230 —Stones, mill, grind, oil and whet. 232 —Antiques and works of art, etc. 236 (1) —Cigarette-paper entered to be warehoused, etc. 240 —Films for cinematographs, etc. (subject to special arrangements). 241 —Greenstone, cut and polished, unmounted. Ex242—Cutlery. 245—Medals, viz., war medals, etc. 247 (1) —Band instruments, etc. 247 (2) —Musical instruments imported for bands, etc. 247 (3) —Organs, viz., great organs and similar organs. 247 (6) —Organ pipes and stop knobs, etc. 247 (7) —Strings of metal wire, catgut, etc. 249—Records for phonographs, etc. 251—Paintings, pictures, etc., by New Zealand students, etc. 252—Paintings, etc., for display in public museums, etc. 256 —Photographs unframed of personal friends, etc. Ex2s8 —Sensitised surfaces, etc., suited for X-ray work.

263—Trophies, prizes, flags, medals, etc. materials, etc. 271—Celluloid, etc, in sheets or rolls, tin-

printed n.e.i. 272—Crayons all kinds. 27S—Ink, printing black, etc. 281—Maps, charts, plans, etc. 284—Paper, viz., bleached sulphite, etc. 287—Emery paper, emery cloth, etc. 288—Filter paper and filter papers, etc. 289—Monotype paper in rolls, etc. 290—Paperhangings. 291—Paper lace. etc. 292—Paper pulp, etc. 293—Printing paper, etc., for counter check books. 294—Papec. seed pockets, etc. 295—Paper, imprinted, viz., true vegetable parchment, etc. 296—Paper, etc., waxed, etc. 299—Paper, etc., for wrapping fruit. 300 (1) —Paper, viz., carbon, etc. 300 (2) (b) —Paper n.e.i. in sheets of size not less than. etc. 300 (2) (d) —Paper n.e.i. in rolls n.e.i. Ex3o1 —Printed books, papers, etc. (excent paper transfers other than toy or embroidery transfers). 302—Religious tracts, etc. 306—Sunday school, etc., lesson sheets, etc. 30 T—Ball bearings, etc. 308—Beekeepe:*' tools, etc. 309 —Bellows n.e.i. 310 (1) —Bolts and nuts, etc. 311—Buckles, etc., of metal, etc. 312—Castors suited for furniture. 313—Chain and chains, metal, etc. 314—Chain belting, etc. 315—Clips, tags, rings, etc. 316—Cocks, metal, low pressure, etc. 318—Cylinders, for compressed gases. 319—Eyelids n.e.i. 322 (2) (a) cases 10-24 bore. 322 (2) (b) —Cartridge cases n.e.i. 322 (3) —Parts of cartridge cases, etc. 322 (5) —Metfil cups for manufacture of cartridge casss. 323—Percussion caps, detonators. 324—Guns, tools, etc., for whaling. Ex32s—Fire engines, etc. (except hand chemical fire extinguishers). 326—Fish hooks, unmounted, etc. 329—Incubators for poultry raising. 330—Iron drums, empty, etc. Cx 333 (1) —Parts of cultivators, harrows, etc. Ex 333 (2) —Agricultural machinery n.e.i. (except hayrakes not hand, hay presses and wool presses). 333 (3) —Rabbit traps and similar traps. Ex 334 (1) —Butter packers, butter pound-

ers and cheese presses. Ex 334 (2) (b) —Dairying machinery n.e.i. (except churns other kinds; piisteurisers; milk coolers, milking machines). 335 (1) —Engines specially suited for use on cycles. 335 (3)— Engines suited for use on tractors, etc. 336—Engines for use on aeroplanes, etc. 33"—Engine governors and turbine governors. Ex33B (I), (a.) —Machinery for generation of electricity, etc. (except transformers suited for use in wireless sets). Ex33B (2). —Electric machinery — switchboards, etc. (except reactance or choking coils suited for use in wireless broadcast receiving sets. Ex33S (3) —Carbons for arc lamps, for electric furnaces or for electric welding. Ex33B (4) —Electric appliances n.e.i., etc. (except transformers, chokes, etc., suited for use in wireless broadcast receiving sets. 338 (r>) —Electric locomotives, etc. 33S (6) —Metal poles or towers, etc. .'!, - {S (7) —Insulated cable and wire, etc. 338 (8) —Sparking plugs for oil engines. 341 (2) —Gas meters n.e.i. 342—Measuring, counting, testing, etc., instruments, etc. 343 —Machinery peculiar to mining or gold saving, etc. 345—Pumps peculiar to dairying, etc. 348—Traction engines and tractors, etc. ."151 (2)— Blacksmiths' braziers', assay, etc., 351 (2) —Blacksmith's, braziers', assay, etc.,

bellows. 351 (3) —Boring and well-drilling machinery.

etc. ex3sl (4)— Blowers and fans, viz.—exhaust, Wast and ventilating. 351 (r>) —Card clothing suitable for use, etc. 351 («) —Grinding machines, emery, and

similar, etc. 351 (7) —Grinding mills, grinding pans, ball mills, etc. exSOl (S) —Sewing machines other than

domestic. 351 (9)— Knitting and knitting machines. ex3sl (10) —Machinery, etc., peculiar to metal working, etc. (except press tools, etc.). 351 (:!) —Printing machines. 352—Machinery, machines, etc., industrial.

ete. 353 (2)— Gas compressing machines, viz,

ammonia compressors. 353 (6) (a) —Vacuum pumps suited for use

on milking machines. 354—Artificers' tools n.e.i., etc. 355—Tanks, rectangular, of sheet Iron, etc. ex 356 (1) (b)—Cutlery. ex 356 (1) (b)—Blind rollers. ex 356 (1) (b) —Clothes wringers. ex3st> (1) (b) —Cast-iron boilers or furnaces and radiators for central heating and equipment, including oil burners neees-

sary for.use therewith. 356 (3)—Builders' and cabinetmakers' hard

ware, etc. 357 (1) —Copper, iron, etc.. In billets, blooms,

etc. 357 (2) —Aluminium, brass, copper, lead, etc.,

in rods. etc. 357 (3) —Gold, platinum, etc., bar, etc. 357 (4) —Iron, galvanised or plain black, viz., angle, etc. 357 (5) (a) —Iron, viz., sheet, plate -etc.,

plain, etc. 357 (5) (b) —Iron, viz., corrugated sheet

iron. ex 357 (6)— Metal n.e.i., viz., foil, leaf, etc.

(except lead sheet). 357 (7) —Shafting, plain, rolled, etc. 357 (8) —Sheet, perforated or cellular. 357 (10) —Wire metal plain n.e.i., etc. 357 (11) —Metal cordage not being gold or

silver. 358-\Metallic and similar capsules. ex3s9—Xails or tacks of copper, etc. (except fencing staples). ex36o—Square grooved spikes or nails; clout over lin; nails with wire spring attachment particularly suited for fixing Steeltex Wallboard. 362 (3) —Pipes, etc., wrought iron or steel screwed, etc. 363 (1) —Printing type and printing materials n.e.i. etc. 363 (2) —Sterotypes, electrotypes, etc 364—Propelling screws, metal, etc. 365—Rails for railways, etc. 368—Saddlers' ironmongery, etc. 369— Shipcuandlery. 370—Signalling apparatus, etc. 371—Springs, coil, volute, etc. 372—Thermostats for making incubators, etc. 374—Welded and flanged boiler furnaces, etc. 376 (1) —Wire netting, metal wove wire, etc. 376 (2) —Electrically-welded wire fabric, etc. 377—Air pressure brakes, etc. 378—Tricycles, etc., fittings for, etc. 379—Bicycles and tricycles, the frames and wheels of which are completely unassembled. 380 —Flying machines. \ 382—Cars, wagons and trucks, railway and tramway. 383—Carriage snafts, poles.'etc.

384—Carriage and cart-maters* materials, etc. 385—Axles, axle arms, axle boxes, etc 3S7—Metal fillings, etc., for mamifaeture or repair of vehicles. 3SB—Wheels and tyres for locomotives, etc. 389 (b) —Chassis for electrically propelled motor vehicles, etc 391—Graphite and plubago in powder or flake form. 392 (1) —Skip greases, etc. 392 (2) —Grinding compounds, etc. 392 (3) —Lubricating greases, etc. 394—0i1s in vessels, etc, containing one gallon or more, viz. 394 (1) —Linseed oil, etc. 304 (3) —Vegetable oils, n.e.l. 394 (4) —Fish oil, n.e.i., etc. 394 (5) —Turpentine; turpentine substitutes, etc. 394 (6) —Crude petroleum, etc 394 (7) —Motor spirits. 394 <S) —Coal tar naptha, n.e.i., etc 394 (9) —Refined mineral oils, n.e.i., etc 394 (10) —Oil, n.e.i., etc. 394 (11) —Mineral oils mixed with vegetable oils, etc. 394 (12)— Mineral oils, etc., for medicinal purposes, etc. 394 (13) —Transformer oil, etc. 396 (I)— Cod-liver oil. 896 (2)— Fish-liver oils, n.e.i., etc. 39G (3) —Oils, etc., containing vitamins, etc. 397 (1) —White lead ground in oil. 397 (6) —Kalsomine distempers, etc 897 (7) —Paints and colours, dry, n.e.t, etc. Ex39S (1) —Waxes, mineral, vegetable, Japanese, n.e.i. 398 (2) —Bottling wax. 398 (3)— Waxes mixed with colouring matter, etc. 399 (a) —Timber logs, round, unworked, viz., ash, hickory, etc. 399 (b) —Timber logs, round unworked, viz., oak (Quercus), n.e.i. 399 (c) —Timber logs, round, unworked, viz., n.e.i. 403 —Laths and shingles. 404 (1) (a) —Timber, rough sawn or rough hewn, viz., ash, hickory, etc. 404 (1) (a) —Timber, rough sawn or etc, viz., oaks (Quercus), n.e.i. 404 (2) —Timber, rough sawn, etc, viz., other kinds, etc. 404 (3) —Timber, rough sawn, etc, viz., n.e.i. 409—Handles, wooden, for tools, n.e.i. 410—Horse boxes and other stock boxes, etc. 411—Oars and sculls, all kinds. 412—Poles of hardwood, etc., for transmission lines. 413 —Sieves hair. 414 (1) —Veneers and plywood. 415—Articles, n.e.i., suited for use of the

blind, etc. 416—Apparatus, etc., for educational purposes, etc. 418—Handles of bone, celluloid, etc. 420—Candlewick. 423—Cordage, and twine, etc., for fishing lines, etc. 424—Hawsers having a circumference, etc. Ex42s—Sash cord. 426—Cork cut: bungs, etc. 42S—Engine packing. 429—Explosives, n.e.i., etc. Ex43l—lsinglass. 432— Agar agar. 434—Manures. 439 —Regalia, etc., for friendly societies. 440—Returned empties, etc. 441—Rocket life-saying apparatus, etc 442—Roofing material, n.e.i., etc. 443 (1) —Sausage skins, etc, of animal origin, etc. 443 (2) —Sausage skins, etc., made from

cellulose, etc. 445—Ships' rockets, blue lights, etc. 446—Stained-glass windows. 447—Tanning materials, crude. 448—A. and M.S. Ex 449 (2) —Plants, trees and shrubs, n.e.i. Ex 449 (2) —All other articles, n.e.i., except coal; roofing compounds bituminous ; paper patterns for costumes, etc.; gut other than surgical gut; lemon and orange rinds, etc.: cotton tubular woven cloths, etc., recleaned. etc.: rags, drinking straws of paraffined paper.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19390424.2.92

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LXX, Issue 95, 24 April 1939, Page 9

Word Count
2,347

MAY COME IN. Auckland Star, Volume LXX, Issue 95, 24 April 1939, Page 9

MAY COME IN. Auckland Star, Volume LXX, Issue 95, 24 April 1939, Page 9