PORTUGAL: AZORES.
ü3
works are shown in the inclosed booklet.® The following table shows
the storage charges for goods stowed in sheds or warehouses:
Warehouse charges in Lisbon.
Kind of goods.
Goods in bigs, per ton
Goods in bulk, per cubic meter
Goods in cases, per ton
Valuable articles, i>er milreis ($1.08 United States).
Petroleum, per ton
Gangerous goods, per ton
First month.
Portu
guese.
Milreis.
0.20
.18
.27
.05
.33
.54
United
States.
$0.216
.194
.292
.5
.356
.583
Each subsequent
month.
Portu
guese.
Milreis.
0.18
.15
.22
.05
.25
.35
United
States.
$0.194
.162
.238
.5
.270
.378
Information as to the receipts and expenditures on account of
service is not furnished by the liarbor-works board.
Merchandise of all kinds is stored pending dispatch to destination,
especially colonial products and coal. There is no fixed time for
£oods to remain in bond. No reliable data can be furnished as to
the extent Americans make use of these warehouses. All nationali
ties are treated exactly alike.
The cost of removal of goods from boat to warehouse and vice
versa, in the case of vessels anchored in the river, depends upon
distance of anchorage from quays, but if they come alongside a saving
°f 40 per cent can be effected in the matter of lighterage. The book
let above referred to gives details of quay sides and depth of water.
The warehouses where the goods are stored are under the care of
Messrs. Hersent & Co. The bonded warehouses are under the care of
die customs officials.
R. H. Kinchant,
Vice and Deputy Consul.
Lisbon, Portugal, August 13,
AZORES.
(From. United States Consul Pickerill, St. Michaels, Azores.)
. As this is not a regular transshipping port, we seldom have neces
sity for warehouses for the storage of merchandise in transit or in
bond. Occasionally, because of accidents or wrecks, it is necessary to
store goods, and for that purpose the Government permits their being
placed in properly sealed private warehouses, access to which is per
mitted only when the owner or his agent is accompanied by a duly au
thorized person. As the service is limited, there has been no necessity
to erect special warehouses; the authorities, therefore, permit the use
of any building that possesses sufficient strength and means for safe
guarding its contents. The service is very unsatisfactory and expen
sive to the patrons, nothing being permitted without due authority and
the presence of the guard. Subject to the ordinary regulations, small
On üle in the Bureau of Statistics, Department of Commerce and Labor.