Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
The pattern of rhizome yield and their accumulation of commercially important chemical constituents in turmeric (Curcuma species), during growth and development
Pocket Edition of the Dingley Tariff Bill: As Passed by Congress, July 24, 1897: Together with Schedule of Articles with Rate of Duty and Paragraph of Law
The Revenue Book: Containing the New Tariff of 1846, Together with the Tariff of 1842, Reduced to Ad Valorem Rates as Far as Practicable: Also, the Sub-treasury, Warehousing and Canadian Transit Bills of 1846, and the Act Allowing Drawback on Goods Exported to Santa Fe and Other Places, Passed in 1845...
Tariff, Or Rates of Duties Payable on Goods, Wares, and Merchandise, Imported Into the United States of America, from and After the First Day of December, 1846, in Conformity with the Act of Congress, Approved July 30, 1846: Also Containing All the Recent Circulars and Decisions of the Treasury Department, Relating to Commerce and the Revenue. Tables of Foreign Weights, Measures, Currencies, &c., Reduced to the United States Standard
Statement showing the value and present duties, both specific and ad valorem, with the equivalent rates, ad valorem and specific respectively, of the principal articles imported into the United States: With explanatory notes. Prepared for the Bureau of Statistics by Joseph S. Moore of the New York Custom-House
The following anecdote, taken from Mr. William D. Boyce's book, Illustrated South America, shows that some of our most widely traveled and best-informed writers even receive an occasional jolt when they explore Latin America. He writes: I thought that I still reflected the brilliant green absorbed from the verdant shores