386° AGRICULTURAL RELIEF Par. 2. When it has been proved by the production of certificates of the customs authorities that goods of the kind described in paragraph 1 have been introduced into the free-trade area of the Reich by payment of the import duty in accordance with the rates prevailing on August 1, 1926, the duties. prevailing in the case of the exported product will be used as a basis for the determination of the value of the import certificates (Einfuhrscheine) up to the full amount of the customs value of the quantities stated in the certificate of the customs authorities. Pak. 3. The Reich's minister of finance will decree more specific rulings, especially concerning the form of certificates (Rinfuhrscheine) as proposed in paragraph 2. Par. 4. This law became effective on August 1, 1926; by consent of a com- mittee of the Reichstag the administration can determine the time of its repeal. Berlin, July 14. 1926. CZECHOSLOVAKIA CZECHOSLOVAKIAN TARIFF AND IMPORT CERTIFICATE SYSTEM From Sammlung der Gesetze und Verordnungen des Cechoslovakischen Staates, No. 53. Published July 9, 1926. : Law of June 22, 1926, amending the Czechoslovakian tariff law and making provision for the regulation of trade relations with foreign countries. The National Assembly of the Czechoslovakian Republic has passed the fol- lowing law : ArTICLE 1. The Czechoslovakian customs tariff is amended as follows: Tariff No. 2 2 2¢ Ys 2y 20 Commodities Wheat, maslin, spelt. _ ye... 3arlen Dats... Maize. .__. Buckwheat Millet. __ Malt (ieneral cus- toms rate in rowns ner 100 kilo- orams i Tariff No. 31 3% 33 Commodities Beans, peas, lentils_...___ Vetch, lupine o_o. Flour and milled products of grain and legumes (rolled, ground, | husked grain; grits and groats) _- Rice unhusked and husked: broken" rice General cus- toms rate in crowns per 100 kilo- erams 36 24 120 26 Notre —Milled products made from rice are assessed under No. 33 ArT. 2. The Government is empowered to regulate by special decree the system of import certificates for grain (with the exception of barley and malt), legumes and rice in accordance with the following principles: } 1. On the exportation to foreign countries of 1ye, oats, wheat, maslin. spelt, and legumes, if the quantity exported amounts to at least 50 quintals of one and the same species of commodity, the exporter will be given, on request, an import certificate entitling its possessor, within a period to be decided by law and not exceeding 9 months, to import duty free a quantity of ome of the above-named commodities corresponding to the tariff value of the import cer- tificate. This applies also to maize and rice. 2. Millers exporting flour and milled products, covered by No. 33, which have been produced on their own premises, if the quantity exported amounts to at least 50 quintals of one and the same product, may be granted, on request, import certificates for the duty free importation of a proportionate quantity of the commodities allowed to be imported by paragraph 1, as well as of millet. The raw product value of flour and milled products is fixed by law. 3. The customs value of the import certificate is determined by the quantity of commodities exported or the amount of their value as raw products, and by the lowest tariff rate prevailing for the particular species of grain or lecumes in auestion.