APPENDIX E 253 



oposittes, & we muste resolue that the kinge & thatt state will 

 haue his eyes open vpon ower actions, & will yf hee cane forse 

 vs from any benifite. . . . 



Now thorrowe all these difficulties, yf the prinse would assiste 

 yt in parte her marchants thatt are well affected goe liberallye 

 into yt, & that the cuntries mighte bee stirred to an assistance 

 by men in some meaute measure, & some gentelmen moued to 

 bee venturers, thatt should foresee not only the vndertakinge 

 butt the secondinge, then I conseaue, that a worthye generall 

 beinge chosen, thatt mighte haue a royall commission, & weare 

 quallifide to judge of the sighte of plases for strengthe, & for 



comodities, would exercise justice in the to the presise 



the marchaunts adventurers gentelmen or others thatt should 



th r persone would keepe his troopes in obedience, and 



in industrye, and vse clemensey justice to the inhabitinge, yt 

 mighte bee a glorious action, for o r prinse and cuntrie, honorable 

 for the general and adventurers and in tyme profitable, to the 

 generall and particular, I double not an acceptable service to 



God 



[Not signed.\ 



\_Not addressed.} 



[Endorsed: ] Plantacion in America. 



[This is evidently a copy, mid the lines represent words 

 which the copyist could not read. A few spaces are filled and 

 obviously wrong words corrected, in the earlier part, in the 

 hand of Sir Edward Conway, as stated in the calendar^ 



[Calendared as} ? 1600. 



APPENDIX F 



THE ATLANTIC FISHERIES ARBITRATION 



AWARD OF THE HAGUE TRIBUNAL AS PUBLISHED 

 SEPTEMBER^, 1910. 



QUESTION I. 



Must any reasonable regulations made by Great Britain, 

 Canada, and Newfoundland in the form of municipal laws, 

 ordinances, or rules (such regulations being (<i) appropriate or 

 necessary for the preservation of the fisheries ; (l>) desirable on 



