64 APPENDIX TO BRITISH CASE. 



ABTICLE III. 



It is agreed that the articles enumerated in the schedule hereunto 

 annexed, being the growth and produce of the aforesaid British 

 colonies or of the United States, shall be admitted into each country 

 respectively free of duty : 



Schedule. 



Grain, flour, and breadstuffs, of all kinds. 

 Animals of all kinds. 

 Fresh, smoked, and salted meats. 

 Cotton-wool, seeds, and vegetables. 

 Undried fruits, dried fruits. 

 Fish of all kinds. 



Products of fish, and of all other creatures living in the water. 

 Poultry, eggs. 



Hides, furs, skins, or tails, undressed. 

 Stone or marble, in its crude or unwrought state. 

 Slate. 



Butter, cheese, tallow. 

 Lard, horns, manures. 

 Ores of metals, of all kinds. 

 Coal. 



Pitch, tar, turpentine, ashes. 



Timber and lumber of all kinds, round, hewed, and sawed, unmanufactured 

 in whole or in part. 

 Firewood. 



Plants, shrubs, and trees. 

 Pelts, wool. 

 Fish-oil. 



Rice, broom-corn, and bark. 

 Gypsum, ground or unground. 



Hewn, or wrought, or unwrought burr or grindstones. 

 Dyestuffs. 



Flax, hemp, and tow, unmanufactured. 

 Unmanufactured tobacco. 

 Rags. 



ARTICLE IV. 



It is agreed that the citizens and inhabitants of the United States 

 shall have the right to navigate the River St. Lawrence, and 

 38 the Canals in Canada used as the means of communicating be- 

 tween the great lakes and the Atlantic Ocean, with their 

 vessels, boats, and crafts, as fully and freely as the subjects of Her 

 Britannic Majesty, subject only to the same tolls and other assess- 

 ments as now are, or may hereafter be, exacted of Her Majesty's 

 said subjects ; it being understood, however, that the British Govern- 

 ment retains the right of suspending this privilege on giving due 

 notice thereof to the Government of the United States. 



It is further agreed that if at any time the British Government 

 should exercise the said reserved right, the Government of the 

 United States shall have the right of suspending, if it think fit, the 

 operations of Art. Ill of the present treaty, in so far as the province 

 of Canada is affected thereby, for so long as the suspension of the 

 free navigation of the River St. Lawrence or the canals may continue. 



It is further agreed that British subjects shall have the right freely 

 to navigate Lake Michigan with their vessels, boats, and crafts so 

 long as the privilege of navigating the River St. Lawrence, secured 

 to American citizens by the above clause of the present article, shall 

 continue; and the Government of the United States further engages 



