Every intendment is in favor of the validity of a statute, and
it must be presumed to be constitutional unless its repugnancy to
the Constitution clearly appears.
The power of Congress to regulate foreign commerce, being an
enumerated power, is complete in itself, acknowledging no
limitations other than those prescribed in the Constitution, and
Congress can, without violating the due process clause, establish
standards and provide from considerations of public policy that no
right shall exist to import an article of food not equal thereto.
No individual has a vested right to trade with foreign nations
superior to the power of Congress to determine what, and upon what
terms, articles may be imported into the United States.
Where a statute acts on a subject as far as practicable and only
leaves to executive officials the duty of bringing about the result
pointed out, and
Page 192 U. S. 471
provided for it is not unconstitutional as vesting executive
officers with legislative powers.
Field v. Clark,
143 U. S. 649.
The Act of March 2, 1897, 29 Stat. 604, to prevent the
importation of impure and unwholesome tea is not unconstitutional
either because the power conferred to establish standards is
legislative and cannot be delegated by Congress to administrative
officers, because persons affected thereby have a vested interest
to import teas which are in fact pure though below the standard
fixed, because the establishment of and enforcement of the standard
qualities constitutes a deprivation of property without due process
of law, because it does not provide for notice and opportunity to
be heard before the rejection of the tea, or because the power to
destroy goods upon the expiration of the time limit without a
judicial proceeding is a condemnation and taking of property
without due process of law.
This case presents for determination the question of the
constitutionality of a statute known as the Tea Inspection Act,
approved March 2, 1897, 29 Stat. 604. The act is copied in full in
the margin.{1}
Page 192 U. S. 472
On January 20, 1902, eight packages of tea were imported into
the port of New York, per the steamer
Adana, by a firm of
which the plaintiff in error was the general partner. The tea was
entered for import at the New York custom-house,
Page 192 U. S. 473
and was stored in a bonded warehouse. At that time, certain
standards, enumerated in the margin,{2} which were selected by the
board of tea inspectors, had been put in force by the Treasury
regulations under said Act of March 2, 1897.
Page 192 U. S. 474
The eight packages of tea in question were embraced in the class
known as "Country green teas," numbered 7 on list of standards. The
tea was examined on February 7, 1902, and was rejected as "inferior
to standard in quality." By the
Page 192 U. S. 475
term quality as thus used was meant the cup quality of the tea
-- that is to say, its taste and flavor. An appeal was taken by the
importer to the Board of General Appraisers, and that board, on
March 10, 1902, certified to the collector that "the said tea is
inferior in quality to the standard prescribed by law," and
accordingly overruled the appeal. The firm was notified of the
decision on March 12, 1902.
In November following, the plaintiff in error -- who had
acquired the interest of his partner in the tea -- applied to the
collector for permission to withdraw the tea for consumption on
payment of the duties. The request was refused. Application was
then made for the release of the tea from bond in order to export
it. This was also refused on the ground that the tea had been
finally rejected under the Act of March 2, 1897, more than six
months previous to the application. The plaintiff in error was also
notified that the tea would be ordered to the public stores for
destruction.
This action was commenced in the Supreme Court of the State of
New York, County of New York, against the collector of the port of
New York, to recover damages for the alleged wrongful seizure,
removal, and destruction of the tea in question. Averments were
made of the importation, storing, tender of duties, and refusal to
accept the same, and of demand for the tea and refusal to deliver.
A general denial was filed. The action being on account of acts
done by the defendant under the revenue laws of the United States,
as collector of customs, it was removed, on his application, to the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of New
York.
Page 192 U. S. 476
At the trial of the case before Circuit Judge Coxe and a jury,
the exhibit reproduced in the margin was introduced in
evidence.{3}
Page 192 U. S. 477
As indicated on this exhibit, the Country green teas thereon
designated were arranged in their order of quality, from the
highest to the lowest, No. 1 being the highest grade and No. 17 the
lowest. The designation in each perpendicular column represented
the teas grown in a particular district, and all the teas
enumerated on the same horizontal line were considered as being
equal in grade.
The chairman of the Board of Tea Experts of the Treasury
Department testified that the standard for Country green teas in
force at the time the tea in question was imported was Hyson of a
Fine Teenkai, or No. 6 on the list of standards, and that, before
fixing this standard,
"the board made diligent search for any Country green teas of
lower grades -- Hysons of lower grades -- of pure teas on the New
York market obtainable by the trade, and were unable to find
any."
The term Hyson, it may be observed, indicated that the tea was
made out of the coarsest leaves. For the plaintiff it was testified
that the quality of the tea in controversy corresponded in quality
with the grade No. 7 on Exhibit 8, while the evidence for the
government was to the effect that it would grade as Fair Fychow,
No. 11 on Exhibit 8. The testimony also tended to show that the tea
in question differed only in respect to the cup quality from the
government standard, the evidence for the government being that it
was "a tea of a decidedly low grade, . . . a pure tea, but of low
quality."
At the close of the evidence, the court overruled a motion to
direct a verdict for the plaintiff, and an exception was reserved.
Thereupon the court, granting a motion on behalf of the defendant,
instructed that the only question was as to the constitutionality
of the statute under which the defendant, as collector of the port,
acted, and directed a verdict in his favor. Upon the judgment
entered on the verdict, which was returned in accordance with this
instruction, the case was brought directly to this Court.
Page 192 U. S. 491
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, after making the foregoing statement,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The assignments of error assail the act of the trial court in
denying the motion for the direction of a verdict in favor of
plaintiff and in giving a peremptory instruction in favor of the
defendant. Summarized, the contentions are as follows: 1, that the
Act of March 2, 1897, confers authority to establish standards, and
that such power is legislative, and cannot constitutionally be
delegated by Congress to administrative officers; 2, that the
plaintiff in error had a vested
Page 192 U. S. 492
right to engage as a trader in foreign commerce, and as such to
import teas into the United States which, as a matter of fact, were
pure, wholesome, and free from adulteration, fraud, and deception,
and which were fit for consumption; 3, that the establishment and
enforcement of standards of quality of teas, which operated to
deprive the alleged vested right, constituted a deprivation of
property without due process of law; 4, that the act is
unconstitutional because it does not provide that notice and an
opportunity to be heard be afforded an importer before the
rejection of his tea by the tea examiner, or the Tea Board of
General Appraisers; and 5, that, in any event, the authority
conferred by the statute to destroy goods upon the expiration of
the time limit for their removal for export, and the destruction of
such property without a judicial proceeding, was condemnation of
property without hearing and the taking thereof without due process
of law.
Whether the contentions just stated are tenable are the
questions for consideration.
In examining the statute in order to determine its
constitutionality, we must be guided by the well settled rule that
every intendment is in favor of its validity. It must be presumed
to be constitutional unless its repugnancy to the Constitution
clearly appears.
Nicol v. Ames, 173 U.
S. 509,
173 U. S.
514-515;
Gettysburg Park Case, 160 U.
S. 668,
160 U. S.
680.
The power to regulate commerce with foreign nations is expressly
conferred upon Congress, and, being an enumerated power, is
complete in itself, acknowledging no limitations other than those
prescribed in the Constitution.
Lottery Case, 188 U.
S. 321,
188 U. S.
353-356;
Leisy v. Hardin, 135 U.
S. 100,
135 U. S. 108.
Whatever difference of opinion, if any, may have existed or does
exist concerning the limitations of the power, resulting from other
provisions of the Constitution, so far as interstate commerce is
concerned, it is not to be doubted that, from the beginning,
Congress has exercised a plenary power in respect to the exclusion
of merchandise brought from foreign countries, not alone directly
by the enactment of embargo statutes, but
Page 192 U. S. 493
indirectly, as a necessary result of provisions contained in
tariff legislation. It has also, in other than tariff legislation,
exerted a police power over foreign commerce by provisions which in
and of themselves amounted to the assertion of the right to exclude
merchandise at discretion. This is illustrated by statutory
provisions which have been in force for more than fifty years,
regulating the degree of strength of drugs, medicines, and
chemicals entitled to admission into the United States and
excluding such as did not equal the standards adopted. 9 Stat. 237,
c. 70; Rev.Stat. sec. 2933
et seq.
The power to regulate foreign commerce is certainly as
efficacious as that to regulate commerce with the Indian tribes.
And this last power was referred to in
United States v. 43
Gallons of Whiskey, 93 U. S. 194,
as exclusive and absolute, and was declared to be "as broad and as
free from restrictions as that to regulate commerce with foreign
nations." In that case, it was held that it was competent for
Congress to extend the prohibition against the unlicensed
introduction and sale of spirituous liquors in the Indian country
to territory in proximity to that occupied by the Indians, thus
restricting commerce with them. We entertain no doubt that it was
competent for Congress, by statute, under the power to regulate
foreign commerce, to establish standards and provide that no right
should exist to import teas from foreign countries into the United
States unless such teas should be equal to the standards.
As a result of the complete power of Congress over foreign
commerce, it necessarily follows that no individual has a vested
right to trade with foreign nations which is so broad in character
as to limit and restrict the power of Congress to determine what
articles of merchandise may be imported into this country and the
terms upon which a right to import may be exercised. This being
true, it results that a statute which restrains the introduction of
particular goods into the United States from considerations of
public policy does not violate the due process clause of the
Constitution.
Page 192 U. S. 494
That the Act of March 2, 1897, was not an exercise by Congress
of purely arbitrary power is evident from the terms of the law and
a consideration of the circumstances which led to its enactment.
The history of the act and its proper construction, as also the
reasons for deciding that the regulations of the Secretary of the
Treasury establishing the standard here in question were warranted
by the statute, were succinctly stated in the opinion of the Court
of Appeals for the Second Circuit in
Buttfield v. Bidwell,
96 F. 328, and we adopt such statement. The court said:
"The basic question in this case is as to the true construction
of the Act of Congress of March 2, 1897, entitled 'An Act to
Prevent the Importation of Impure and Unwholesome Tea.' Section 1
makes it unlawful"
"to import or bring into the United States any merchandise as
tea which is inferior in purity, quality, and fitness for
consumption to the standards provided in section 3 of this act, and
the importation of all such merchandise is hereby prohibited."
"Section 2 provides for the appointment by the Secretary of the
Treasury, immediately after the passage of the act, and on or
before February 15 of each subsequent year, of the Board of Tea
Experts, 'who shall prepare and submit to him standard samples of
tea.' Section 3 provides that the Secretary of the Treasury, upon
the recommendation of said board, 'shall fix and establish uniform
standards of purity, quality, and fitness for consumption of all
kinds of teas imported into the United States,' samples of such
standards to be deposited in various custom-houses, and supplied to
importers and dealers at cost, and declares that"
"all teas, or merchandise described as tea, of inferior purity,
quality, and fitness for consumption to such standards shall be
deemed within the prohibition of the first section hereof."
"Sections 4-7 provide for the examination of importations of
tea, for a reexamination by the Board of General Appraisers in case
of a protest by the importer or collector against the finding of
the primary examiner, and for testing the purity, quality, and
fitness for consumption in all cases of examination or
reexamination,"
"according
Page 192 U. S. 495
to the usages and customs of the tea trade, including the test
of an infusion of the same in boiling water, and, if necessary,
chemical analysis. . . ."
"The history of the enactment shows that the word ['quality']
was industriously inserted to make the act a more stringent
substitute for the existing legislation. By the Act of March 2,
1883, then in force, any merchandise imported 'for sale as tea,'
adulterated with spurious or exhausted leaves, or containing such
an admixture of deleterious substances as to make it 'unfit for
use,' was prohibited, and exhausted leaves were defined to include
any tea which had been deprived of its proper quality, strength, or
virtue by steeping, infusion, decoction or other means. Thus, the
importation of tea containing such an admixture of leaves as to be
deprived of its proper quality or virtue by any method of treatment
was prohibited. That act, however, contained no provision for the
establishment of government standards, and the establishment of
uniform standards in the interest of the importer and of the
consumer had become a recognized necessity. In a report by the
Senate committee on commerce in 1897, the provision was suggested
as designed, among other things, to protect the consumer against
'worthless rubbish,' and insure his 'receiving an article fit for
use.' The report pointed out that the 'lowest average grade of tea
ever before known was now being used' by our consumers, and
proposed as a remedy the establishment of standards of the 'lowest
grades of tea fit for use.' As originally introduced in the House,
the bill prohibited the importation of 'any merchandise as tea
which is inferior in purity or fitness for consumption to the
standards provided in section 3 of this act.' It was amended in the
Senate by inserting the word 'quality' between the words 'purity'
and 'fitness for consumption' wherever they occurred in the House
bill. The amendment evinces the intention of the Senate to
authorize the adoption of uniform standards by the Secretary of the
Treasury which would be adequate to exclude the lowest grades of
tea, whether demonstrably of inferior purity, or unfit for
consumption, or
Page 192 U. S. 496
presumably or possibly so because of their inferior quality. The
House concurred in the amendment, and the measure was enacted in
its present terms. We conclude that the regulations of the
Secretary of the Treasury are warranted by the provisions of the
act."
The claim that the statute commits to the arbitrary discretion
of the Secretary of the Treasury the determination of what teas may
be imported, and therefore in effect vests that official with
legislative power, is without merit. We are of opinion that the
statute, when properly construed, as said by the circuit court of
appeals, but expresses the purpose to exclude the lowest grades of
tea, whether demonstrably of inferior purity or unfit for
consumption or presumably so because of their inferior quality.
This, in effect, was the fixing of a primary standard, and devolved
upon the Secretary of the Treasury the mere executive duty to
effectuate the legislative policy declared in the statute. The case
is within the principle of
Field v. Clark, 143 U.
S. 649, where it was decided that the third section of
the Tariff Act of October 1, 1890, was not repugnant to the
Constitution as conferring legislative and treatymaking power on
the President, because it authorized him to suspend the provisions
of the act relating to the free introduction of sugar, molasses,
coffee, tea, and hides. We may say of the legislation in this case,
as was said of the legislation considered in
Field v.
Clark, that it does not in any real sense invest
administrative officials with the power of legislation. Congress
legislated on the subject as far as was reasonably practicable, and
from the necessities of the case was compelled to leave to
executive officials the duty of bringing about the result pointed
out by the statute. To deny the power of Congress to delegate such
a duty would, in effect, amount but to declaring that the plenary
power vested in Congress to regulate foreign commerce could not be
efficaciously exerted.
Whether or not the Secretary of the Treasury failed to carry
into effect the expressed purpose of Congress and established
Page 192 U. S. 497
standards which operated to exclude teas which would have been
entitled to admission had proper standards been adopted is a
question we are not called upon to consider. The sufficiency of the
standards adopted by the Secretary of the Treasury was committed to
his judgment, to be honestly exercised, and if that were important,
there is no assertion here of bad faith or malice on the part of
that officer in fixing the standards, or on the part of the
defendant in the performance of the duties resting on him.
It is urged that there was denial of due process of law in
failing to accord plaintiff in error a hearing before the board of
tea inspectors and the Secretary of the Treasury in establishing
the standard in question, and before the general appraisers upon
the reexamination of the tea. Waiving the point that the plaintiff
in error does not appear to have asked for a hearing, and assuming
that the statute did not confer such a right, we are of opinion
that the statute was not objectionable for that reason. The
provisions in respect to the fixing of standards and the
examination of samples by government experts was for the purpose of
determining whether the conditions existed which conferred the
right to import, and they therefore in no just sense concerned a
taking of property. This latter question was intended by Congress
to be finally settled not by a judicial proceeding, but by the
action of the agents of the government, upon whom power on the
subject was conferred.
It remains only to consider the contention that the provision of
the statute commanding the destruction of teas not exported within
six months after their final rejection was unconstitutional. The
importer was charged with notice of the provisions of the law, and
the conditions upon which teas might be brought from abroad, with a
view of their introduction into the United States for consumption.
Failing to establish the right to import, because of the inferior
quality of the merchandise as compared with the standard, the duty
was imposed upon the importer to perform certain requirements, and
to take the goods from the custody of the authorities within a
period
Page 192 U. S. 498
of time fixed by the statute, which was ample in duration. He
was notified of the happening of the various contingencies
requiring positive action on his part. The duty to take such action
was enjoined upon him, and if he failed to exercise it, the
collector was under the obligation, after the expiration of the
time limit, to destroy the goods. That plaintiff in error had
knowledge of the various steps taken with respect to the tea,
including the final rejection by the Board of General Appraisers,
is conceded. We think the provision of the statute complained of
was not wanting in due process of law.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER and MR. JUSTICE BROWN, not having heard the
argument, took no part in the decision of this case.
"
An Act To Prevent the Importation of Impure and Unwholesome
Tea."
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled, That from
and after May first, eighteen hundred and ninety-seven, it shall be
unlawful for any person or persons or corporation to import or
bring into the United States any merchandise as tea which is
inferior in purity, quality, and fitness for consumption to the
standards provided in section three of this act, and the
importation of all such merchandise is hereby prohibited."
"SEC. 2. That immediately after the passage of this act, and on
or before February fifteenth of each year thereafter, the Secretary
of the Treasury shall appoint a board, to consist of seven members,
each of whom shall be an expert in teas, and who shall prepare and
submit to him standard samples of tea; that the persons so
appointed shall be at all times subject to removal by the said
Secretary, and shall serve for the term of one year; that vacancies
in the said board occurring by removal, death, resignation, or any
other cause shall be forthwith filled by the Secretary of the
Treasury by appointment, such appointee to hold for the unexpired
term; that said board shall appoint a presiding officer, who shall
be the medium of all communications to or from such board; that
each member of said board shall receive as compensation the sum of
fifty dollars per annum, which, together with all necessary
expenses while engaged upon the duty herein provided, shall be paid
out of the appropriation for 'expenses of collecting the revenue
from customs.'"
"SEC. 3. That the Secretary of the Treasury, upon the
recommendation of the said board, shall fix and establish uniform
standards of purity, quality, and fitness for consumption of all
kinds of teas imported into the United States, and shall procure
and deposit in the customhouses of the ports of New York, Chicago,
San Francisco, and such other ports as he may determine, duplicate
samples of such standards; that said Secretary shall procure a
sufficient number of other duplicate samples of such standards to
supply the importers and dealers in tea at all ports desiring the
same at cost. All teas, or merchandise described as tea, of
inferior purity, quality, and fitness for consumption to such
standards shall be deemed within the prohibition of the first
§ hereof."
"SEC. 4. That on making entry at the custom-house of all teas,
or merchandise described as tea, imported into the United States,
the importer or consignee shall give bond to the collector of the
port that such merchandise shall not be removed from the warehouse
until released by the collector, after it shall have been duly
examined with reference to its purity, quality, and fitness for
consumption; that for the purpose of such examination, samples of
each line in every invoice of tea shall be submitted by the
importer or consignee to the examiner, together with the sworn
statement of such importer or consignee that such samples represent
the true quality of each and every part of the invoice, and accord
with the specifications therein contained, or, in the discretion of
the Secretary of the Treasury, such samples shall be obtained by
the examiner and compared by him with the standards established by
this act, and in cases where said tea, or merchandise described as
tea, is entered at ports where there is no qualified examiner as
provided in section seven, the consignee or importer shall, in the
manner aforesaid, furnish under oath a sample of each line of tea
to the collector or other revenue officer to whom is committed the
collection of duties, and said officer shall draw or cause to be
drawn samples of each line in every invoice, and shall forward the
same to a duly qualified examiner, as provided in section seven:
Provided, however, That the bond above required shall also
be conditioned for the payment of all custom-house charges which
may attach to such merchandise prior to its being released or
destroyed (as the case may be) under the provisions of this
act."
"SEC. 5. That if, after an examination as provided in section
four, the tea is found by the examiner to be equal in purity,
quality, and fitness for consumption to the standards hereinbefore
provided, and no reexamination shall be demanded by the collector
as provided in section six, a permit shall at once be granted to
the importer or consignee declaring the tea free from the control
of the custom authorities; but if, on examination, such tea, or
merchandise described as tea, is found, in the opinion of the
examiner, to be inferior in purity, quality, and fitness for
consumption to the said standards, the importer or consignee shall
be immediately notified, and the tea, or merchandise described as
tea, shall not be released by the custom-house, unless, on a
reexamination called for by the importer or consignee, the finding
of the examiner shall be found to be erroneous:
Provided,
That, should a portion of the invoice be passed by the examiner, a
permit shall be granted for that portion, and the remainder held
for further examination, as provided in section six."
"SEC. 6. That in case the collector, importer, or consignee
shall protest against the finding of the examiner, the matter in
dispute shall be referred for decision to a board of three United
States general appraisers, to be designated by the Secretary of the
Treasury, and if such board shall, after due examination, find the
tea in question to be equal in purity, quality, and fitness for
consumption to the proper standards, a permit shall be issued by
the collector for its release and delivery to the importer; but if,
upon such final reexamination by such board, the tea shall be found
to be inferior in purity, quality, and fitness for consumption to
the said standards, the importer or consignee shall give a bond,
with security satisfactory to the collector, to export said tea or
merchandise described as tea, out of the limits of the United
States within a period of six months after such final
reexamination, and if the same shall not have been exported within
the time specified, the collector at the expiration of that time,
shall cause the same to be destroyed."
"SEC. 7. That the examination herein provided for shall be made
by a duly qualified examiner at a port where standard samples are
established, and where the merchandise is entered at ports where
there is no qualified examiner, the examination shall be made at
that one of said ports which is nearest the port of entry, and
that, for this purpose, samples of the merchandise, obtained in the
manner prescribed by section four of this act, shall be forwarded
to the proper port by the collector or chief officer at that port
of entry; that in all cases of examination or reexamination of
teas, or merchandise described as tea, by examiners or boards of
United States general appraisers under the provisions of this act,
the purity, quality, and fitness for consumption of the same shall
be tested according to the usages and customs of the tea trade,
including the testing of an infusion of the same in boiling water,
and, if necessary, chemical analysis."
"SEC. 8. That in cases of reexamination of teas, or merchandise
described as teas, by a board of United States general appraisers
in pursuance of the provisions hereof, samples of the tea, or
merchandise described as tea, in dispute, for transmission to such
board for its decision, shall be put up and sealed by the examiner
in the presence of the importer or consignee if he so desires, and
transmitted to such board, together with a copy of the finding of
the examiner, setting forth the cause of condemnation and the claim
or ground of the protest of the importer relating to the same, such
samples, and the papers therewith, to be distinguished by such mark
that the same may be identified; that the decision of such board
shall be in writing, signed by them, and transmitted, together with
the record and samples, within three days after the rendition
thereof, to the collector, who shall forthwith furnish the examiner
and the importer or consignee with a copy of said decision or
finding. The Board of United States General Appraisers herein
provided for shall be authorized to obtain the advice, when
necessary, of persons skilled in the examination of teas, who shall
each receive for his services in any particular case a compensation
not exceeding five dollars."
"SEC. 9. That no imported teas which have been rejected by a
customs examiner or by a board of United States general appraisers,
and exported under the provisions of this act, shall be reimported
into the United States under the penalty of forfeiture for a
violation of this prohibition."
"SEC. 10. That the Secretary of the Treasury shall have the
power to enforce the provisions of this act by appropriate
regulations."
"SEC. 11. That teas actually on shipboard for shipment to the
United States at the time of the passage of this act shall not be
subject to the prohibition hereof, but the provisions of the act
entitled 'An Act to Prevent the importation of Adulterated and
Spurious Texas,' approved March second, eighteen hundred and
eighty-three, shall be applicable thereto."
"SEC. 12. That the act entitled 'An Act to Prevent the
Importation of Adulterated and Spurious Texas,' approved March
second, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, is hereby repealed, such
repeal to take effect on the date on which this act goes into
effect."
"Approved, March 2, 1897."
No. 1. Formosa Oolong.
No. 2. Foochon Oolong.
No. 3. North China Congon.
No. 4. South China Congon.
No. 5. India Tea (used for Ceylon tea)
No. 6. Pingsuey, green tea.
No. 7. Country green tea.
No. 8. Japan tea, pan fired (used for sun dried).
No. 9. Japan tea, basket fired.
No. 10. Japan tea, dust or fannings.
No. 11. Capers (used for scented orange Pekoe).
No. 12. Canton Oolong(a).
No. 13. Scented Canton (a).
bwm:
EXHIBIT No. 8
Schedule of Country Green Texas arranged in Order of Quality
1 Choicest Moyune
2 Choice Moyune Choicest Teenkai
3 Finest Moyune Choice Teenkai
4 Fine to Finest Moyune Finest Teenkai
5 Fine Moyune Fine to Finest Teenkai
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
6 On Fine Moyune Fine Teenkai
7 Fully Good Medium Moyune On Fine Teenkai
8 Good Medium Moyune Fully Good Medium Teenkai Finest Fychow
9 On Good Medium Moyune Good Medium Teenkai Fine "
10 Fair Moyune On Good Teenkai Good Med. Fychow Finest
Wenchow
11 Good Common Moyune Fair Teenkai Fair " Fine "
12 Common Moyune Good Common Moyune Good Commmon " Good Med. "
Good, clean, genuine
Shanghai packed
13 Common Teenkai Common " Fair "
14 Good Common
Wenchow
15 Common Wenchow
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
16 Mixed, Shanghai
packed
17 Common, refined and
adulterated Shanghai
packed
ewm: