232 THE PUR SEALS <>F TIIK PKIMILOF ISLANDS. 



resorting to the said son. and the rights of the citi/ens and subjects of either country 

 as regards the taking of fur seals in or habitually resorting to the said waters, should, 

 be submitted to a tribunal of arbitration to be composed of seven arbitrators, who 

 should be appointed iu the following manner, that is to say: Two should be named by 

 the President of the United States: two should be named by Her I'.iitannic Majesty; 

 II is Excellency the President of the French Republic should be jointly requested by 

 the high contracting parties to name one; His Majesty the King of Italy should be so 

 requested to name one; His Majesty the King of Sweden and Norway should be so 

 requested to name one; the seven arbitrators to be so named should be jurists of 

 distinguished reputation in their respective countries, and the selecting powers should 

 be requested to choose, if possible, jurists who are acquainted with the Knglish 

 language; 



And whereas it was further agreed by Article II of the said treaty that the 

 arbitrators should meet at Paris within twenty days after the delivery of the counter 

 cases mentioned in Article IV, and should proceed impartially and carefully to 

 examine and decide the questions which had been or should be laid before them as in 

 the said treaty provided on the part of the Governments of the United States and of 

 Her Britannic Majesty, respectively, and that all questions considered by the tribunal, 

 including the final decision, should be determined by a majority of all the arbitrators; 



And whereas by Article VI of the said treaty it was further provided as follows: 



In deciding the matters submitted to the said arbitrators, it is agrt-ed that the following live 

 points shall be submitted to them in order that their award shall embrace a distinct decision upon 

 cadi of said five points, to wit: 



1. What exclusive jurisdiction in the sea now known as Hering Sea, and what exclusive rights in 

 the seal fisheries therein, did Russia assert and exercise prior and tip to the time of the cession of 

 Alaska to the United States? 



2. How far were these claims of jurisdiction as to the seal fisheries recoj;ni/ed and conceded by 

 Great Britain? 



3. Was the body of water now known as Hering Sea included in the phrase 1'acilic Ocean, as used 

 in the treaty of 1S1'."> between Great Britain and Russia; and what rights, if any, in Hering Sea were 

 held and exclusively exercised by Russia alter said treaty ' 



4. Did not all the rights of Russia, as to jurisdiction and as to the seal fisheries In Bering Sea east 

 of the water boundary, in the treaty between the United States and Russia of the :>dth <>f March, ix<i7, 

 paws unimpaired to the United States under that treaty f 



5. Has the United States any right, and if so, what right, of protection or property in the fur 

 seals frc<|uentin ' the islands of the United States in Hering Sea when such seals are found outside the 

 ordinary 3-mile limit f 



And whereas by Article VII of the said treaty it was further agreed as follows: 



If the determination of the foregoing questions as to the exclusive jurisdiction of the United 

 States shall leave the subject in such position that the concurrence of Great Hritain is necessary to 

 the establishment of regulations for the proper protection and preservation of the fur seal in, or 

 habitually resorting to, Hering Sea, the arbitrators shall then determine what concurrent regulations, 

 outside the jurisdiction limits of the respective Governments, are necessary, and over what waters 

 such regulations should extend; 



The high contracting parties furthermore agree to cooperate in securing the adhesion of other 

 powers to such regulations; 



And whereas by Article VIII of the said treaty, after reciting that the high 

 contracting parties had found themselves unable to agree upon a reference which 

 should include the question of the liability of each for the injuries alleged to have been 

 sustained by the other, or by its citizens, in connection with the claims presented and 



