2318 NORTH ATLANTIC COAST FISHERIES ARBITRATION. 



packets are, or majr be, permitted to come; to enter into the same, 

 to anchor and remain there and refit, subject always to the laws and 

 usages of the two countries respectively" 



Two Sicilies, 1855 (p. 865). 



Article IV. " The citizens and subjects of each of the high con- 

 tracting parties shall have free and undoubted right to travel and 

 reside in the States of the other, remaining subject only to the pre- 

 cautions of police which are practised towards the citizens or sub- 

 jects of the most favored nations." 



Great Britain, 1794 (p- 326). 



Article XIII. " His Majesty consents that the vessels belonging to 

 the citizens of the United States of America shall be admitted and 

 hospitably received in all the sea-ports and harbors of the British ter- 

 ritories in the East Indies. And that the citizens of the said United 

 States may freely carry on a trade between the said territories and 

 the said United States, in all articles of which the importation or 

 exportation respectively, to or from the said territories, shall not be 

 entirely prohibited. . . . And the citizens of the United States, 

 whenever they arrive in any port or harbor in the said territories, or 

 if they should be permitted, in manner aforesaid, to go to any other 

 place therein, shall always be subject to the laws, government, and 

 jurisdiction of what nature established in such harbor, port, or place, 

 according as the same may be. The citizens of the United States may 

 also touch for refreshment at the island of St. Helena, but subject in 

 all respects to such regulations as the British Government may from 

 time to time establish there." 



(pp. 326-327.) 



Article XlV. " There shall be between all the dominions of His 

 Majesty in Europe and the territories of the United States a recip- 

 rocal and perfect liberty of commerce and navigation. The people 

 and inhabitants of the two countries, respectively, shall have liberty 

 freely and securely, and without hindrance and molestation, to come 

 with their ships and cargoes to the lands, countries, cities, ports, 

 places, and rivers within the dominions and territories aforesaid, to 

 enter into the same, to resort there, and to remain and reside there, 

 without any limitation of time. Also to hire and possess houses and 

 warehouses for the purposes of their commerce, and generally the 

 merchants and traders on each side shall enjoy the most complete 

 protection, and security for their commerce ; but subject always as to 

 what respects this article to tJie laws and statutes of the two coun- 

 tries respectively. 



TREATIES OF GREAT BRITAIN. 



(References are to volumes of Hertslet's " Treaties and Conventions 

 relating to Commerce and Navigation.") 



Portugal, 16$ (II, p. 2). 



Article III. "And that the subjects of each of the most renowned 

 Kings before named, in the Dominions and Territories of the other, 



