✨ Export Prohibition List
2422
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 78
(c) Pigeon peas.
(A) Straw.
(B) Forges, portable.
(B) Fuel, manufactured.
(C) Furs, and manufactures thereof.
(A) Fuses.
(B) Fustic (chips and extract).
(C) Gauges for cartridges and shells.
(A) Glass for optical instruments.
(B) Gloves, fingerless sheepskin.
(B) Gloves, men’s woollen.
(B) Gloves, with leather palms.
(C) Glucose.
(B) Goat skins.
(A) Goldbeaters’ skin.
(A) Gramophone and other sound records.
(B) Graphite, and mixtures containing graphite.
(B) Grindery, the following articles of, used in the making of boots and shoes :—
Brass rivets.
Cutlan studs.
Heel attaching pins.
Heel tip nails.
Heel tips.
Hobnails.
Lasting tacks and rivets, and iron shoe rivets.
Protector studs.
Screwing wire.
Steel bills.
(C) Grindstones.
(C) Grubbers.
(B) Guanos.
(C) Gums (except such as contain caoutchouc and except gum tragacanth).
(B) Gums containing caoutchouc.
(A) Gum tragacanth.
(B) Guts.
(C) Hacksaw blades.
(B) Hair, animal.
(B) Hair, animal, tops, noils, and yarns of.
(C) Handles and helves for grubbers, pickaxes, spades, and shovels.
(A) Harness and metal fittings therefor.
(A) Heliographs.
(A) Hemp, other than Manila hemp.
(C) Hemp, Manila.
Hemp, the following manufactures of :—
(C) Binder and reaper twine.
(B) Cloth.
(B) Cordage and twine (except cordage or twine of Manila hemp, and binder or reaper twine).
(C) Cordage and twine of Manila hemp.
(A) Hemp ropes, old.
(A) Hemp waste.
(A) Hides of cattle, buffaloes, and horses, and calfskins.
(B) Horse shoes.
(B) Hosiery, wool or wool mixed, for men’s wear.
(B) Huts, wooden.
(C) Implements and apparatus designed exclusively for the manufacture of munitions of war, for the manufacture or repair of arms or of war material for use on land or sea, the following :—
Cordite presses.
Dies for cartridge cases.
Gauges for cartridges or shells.
Incorporators.
Lapping machines.
Rifling machines.
Wire-winding machines.
(B) Implements for cutting or fixing barbed or galvanized wire.
(A) Incandescent mantles.
(C) Incorporators.
(A) Jute padding.
(A) Jute piecegoods.
(B) Jute, raw and carded.
(A) Jute threads.
(A) Jute twist.
(A) Jute waste.
(A) Jute webbing.
(A) Jute wrappers (Surrat tares).
(A) Jute yarns.
(B) Kettles, camp.
(A) Khaki camel fleece.
(A) Khaki woollen or worsted cloth and mixtures thereof.
(B) Lacs, not including lac dye.
(B) Lanterns suitable for camp use.
(C) Lapping machines.
Leather and leather goods of the following descriptions :—
(C) Chamois, glacé kid, morocco, persians, roans, and seal-leather.
(B) Leather articles of personal equipment suitable for military purposes.
(B) Leather bandoliers.
(B) Leather belting, hydraulic leather, pump leather, and picking bands.
(B) Leather belts.
(C) Leather, bookbinding.
(C) Leather, enamelled, japanned, or varnished.
(B) Leather laces.
(B) Leather pouches.
(C) Leather suitable for textile machinery, except leather belting and picking bands.
(B) Leather suitable for military clothing.
(A) Leather suitable for saddlery, harness, or military boots.
(C) Leather waste.
(C) Linen manufactures, the following :—
Canvas.
Canvas hose.
Drills, woven.
Ducks, woven.
Linen piecegoods woven from bleached yarns, but not bleached in the piece.
Linen thread.
Linen yarn.
Union cloths containing cotton in the proportion of 25 per cent. or upwards.
(A) Linen waste.
(B) Logwood (chips, extract, and preparations).
(B) Lubricants and articles and mixtures containing lubricants.
(A) Machine guns, mountings for machine guns and component parts thereof.
(C) Machinery for ditching and trenching.
(C) Machinery, metal-working, and the component parts and accessories thereof.
(A) Magnesite and magnesite bricks.
(A) Magnesite, caustic or lightly calcined, and dead burnt magnesite.
(A) Magnetos.
(B) Manures, compounds, containing nitrate or phosphate.
(B) Maps and plans of any place within the territory of any belligerent, or within the area of military operations, on a scale of four miles to one inch or on any larger scale, and reproductions on any scale by photography or otherwise of such maps or plans.
(C) Mess tins.
Metals and ores, the following :—
(A) Aluminium, alloys of aluminium, and manufactures of aluminium.
(B) Antimony and alloys of antimony.
(C) Arsenical ore.
(B) Bauxite.
(A) Cerium and its alloys (except ferrocerium, the exportation of which is prohibited to all ports and destinations abroad other than ports and destinations in British Possessions and Protectorates).
(B) Chrome ore.
(B) Cobalt, cobalt ore, and alloys of cobalt.
(C) Copper ore.
(B) Copper, unwrought and part wrought, all kinds, including alloys of copper) such as brass, gun metal, naval brass and delta metal, phosphor copper, phosphor bronze, and solder containing copper), copper and brass circles, slabs, bars, ingots, scrap, rods and plates and also wrought copper of the following descriptions: Copper and brass pipes, sheets, condenser plates, copper wire, brass wire, bronze wire, perforated brass sheets, perforated brass linings, and copper foil.
(C) Copper manufactures, the following :—
All articles wholly or partly manufactured of copper or its alloys not otherwise specifically prohibited.
(A) Iron ore.
(A) Iron, pig.
(A) Iron pyrites.
(A) Iron, scrap.
(B) Lead ore.
(A) Lead, pig.
(B) Lead, pipe, scrap, or sheet, and solder containing lead.
(A) Magnesium and its alloys.
(B) Manganese and manganese ore.
(A) Mercury.
(B) Molybdenum and molybdenite.
(B) Nickel, alloys of nickel, and nickel ore.
(A) Platinum, alloys of platinum, and manufactures containing platinum.
(B) Scheelite.
(B) Selenium.
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Online Sources for this page:
VUW Te Waharoa —
NZ Gazette 1916, No 78
NZLII —
NZ Gazette 1916, No 78
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🏭
Proclamation Prohibiting Exportation of Certain Goods from the United Kingdom
(continued from previous page)
🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry19 July 1916
Export Prohibition, Customs, Trade Restrictions, United Kingdom, World War I, Chemicals, Pharmaceuticals, Industrial Materials