Full text: Warehouses in foreign countries for storage of merchandise in transit or in bond

Spain: Barcelona. 
95 
ODESSA. 
(From United States Consul Hcenan, Odessa, Russia.) 
The only warehouses here are the customs stores at the port and 
elsewhere in the town in which goods arriving from abroad are placed 
or stored for examination on which to base the amount of customs 
duties to be paid. Goods may remain in these stores as long as the 
storage charges are paid. Goods in transit from Odessa to some point 
in the interior, such as cotton or tea, are simply loaded into cars on 
the quay by the customs authorities and forwarded to their destina 
tion. When the destination is Kiev, Moscow, etc., the duties are paid 
at these large centers, otherwise at Odessa. There are no private 
bonded warehouses at this port, but the customs regulations here 
permit the storage of such articles as tea in the private storehouse of 
the importer, said storehouse being in charge of customs officials. Tea 
is imported largely at Odessa from China, Japan, and India, and it 
is tested and mixed here to suit the Russian taste. . Tea is also ex 
ported from this port to the United States, and the trade is growing. 
The large addition to the population of New York and elsewhere 
from Russia accounts for this new trade. Tea which remains in the 
•storehouse above mentioned is not required to pay duty until such 
time as it is removed. Tea exported from these stores is not required 
to pay duty. 
Thos. E. Heenan, Consul. 
Odessa, Russia, June 29,190J. 
SPAIN. 
BARCELONA. V 
(From United States Vice-Cunsul-Ocncral Rider, Barcelona, Spain.) 
The port of Barcelona is now provided with a number of small 
Warehouses where goods can be stored on payment of a monthly rent, 
f he only large warehouses, however, are those known by the names 
\Crédito y Docks de Barcelona,” “Almacenes Generales de Comer 
cio," and “ Vda. de A. Nelma.” The two former have refused to 
furnish me with any information whatever, in spite of repeated re 
quests, and I am therefore compelled to confine my report to the 
‘ Vda. de A. Xelma ” warehouses. These cover an area of about 
05,000 square feet, and the cost of the site and building was 250,000 
pesetas ($35,714). They are owned by the widow of A. Xelma, and 
urc under the management of José M. Serra. These warehouses are 
extensively used by merchants who have no stores of their own or 
whose warehouses are too small. 
The following is the scale of charges per 100 kilos (220.46 pounds) : 
f or entering and storing, 5 centavos (0.7 cent) ; rent and fire insur 
ance for one month, 6 centavos (0.85 cent) ; clearing goods from ware 
house, 5 centavos; weighing, 5 centavos; measuring, when required, 
] u sacks of 70 liters (7.9457 pecks), costs 5 centavos (0.7 cent) per 
cuartera, a dry measure containing about 15 pecks.
	        
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