APPENDICES TO ORAL ARGUMENTS. 



2337 



without consent, nor to remove 

 them except in case of necessity 

 and on notice to admiral and 

 others. 



(5.) No one to steal any fish, 

 train, salt, &c. 



(6.) No one to set fire to 

 woods or to damage trees by 

 rinding except for covering of 

 cookrooms. 



(7.) No one to hinder hauling 

 of seines for bait in usual places. 



(9.) No Taverns. 

 (10.) Limits stage room occu- 

 pied by any planter. 



(13.) The company to assem- 

 bly on Lords Day for worship. 



(8) No person to rob nets, 

 take bait out boats or rob or steal 

 nets. 



(11) No planter to build 

 house, keep pigs or cattle near 

 ground where fish are dried. 



(12) Provisions imported for 

 sale necessary for fishing to be 

 free for any person to buy. 



[These were regulations for These instructions and an- 

 fishing and for drying and nexed laws and ordinances were 



curing on shore.] 



Br. App. 512. 1660. 

 Star Chamber rules. 

 Similar to 1653 regulations. 



issued for one year. They were 

 for the preservation of public 

 order and to protect the liberty 

 of fishing from disturbance and 

 interruption. They did not limit 

 the exercise of such liberty, but 

 were intended to prevent its limi- 

 tation. 



Instructions and ordinances of 

 this nature were declared to be 

 without legal effect by the judg- 

 *m#nt rendered in Jennings & 

 Long against Hunt & Beard, ap- 

 pended to this Memorandum 

 (p. 16). 



" Star Chamber Rules of 

 Charles I and additions by 

 Charles II., January 26, 1660:' 



Rules of this nature were de- 

 clared to be without legal effect 

 by the judgment rendered in Jen- 

 nings & Long against Hunt & 

 Beard, appended to this Memo- 

 randum (page 16). 



