338
THE HONGKONG GOVERNMENT GAZETTE, JUNE 16,
1916.
Machines capable of being employed in the manufacture
of munitions of war.
Manganese and manganese ore. Manganese dioxide.
Maps and plans of any place within the territory of any belligerent, or within the area of military operations, on a scale of 4 miles to 1 inch or any larger scale, and reproductions on any scale, by photography, or otherwise, of such maps or plans.
Materials especially adapted for use in the manufacture
or repair of tyres.
Materials used in the manufacture of explosives.
Mercury.
Methyl alcohol.
Military waggons and their component parts.
Mineral oils, including benzine and motor spirit.
Molybdenum and molybdenite.
Motor vehicles of all kinds and their component parts
and accessories.
Naphthalene and its mixtures and derivatives.
Nautical instruments, all kinds of.
Negotiable instruments.
Nickel and nickel ore.
Nitric acid and nitrates of all kinds.
Oils and fats, animal, fish, and vegetable, other than those capable of use as lubricants, and not includ- ing essential oils.
Oleaginous seeds, nuts, and kernels.
Oleum.
Paper money.
Paraffin wax.
Peppers.
Phenol (carbolic acid) and its mixtures and derivatives. Phosphorus and its compounds.
Phosgene.
Potassium salts.
Powders, whether specially prepared for use in war or
not.
Projectiles of all kinds and their component parts. Prussiate of soda.
Railway materials, both fixed and rolling stock.
Ramie.
Rangefinders and their component parts.
Rattans.
Realisable securities.
Resinous products.
Rubber (including raw, waste, and reclaimed rubber, solutions and jellies containing rubber, or any other preparations containing rubber, balata, and gutta- percha, and the following varieties of rubber, viz., Borneo, Guayule, Jelutong, Palembang, Pontianac, and all other substances containing caoutchouc), and goods made wholly or partly of rubber.
No comments yet.
Private notes are available after approval.