68 CASE OF THE UNITED STATES. 



Inasmuch, therefore, as the coasts to which the objectionable provi- 

 sions related in the first British proposal were, with some additions, 

 the coasts designated in the final draft as those upon which the 

 American fishermen should have liberty to take fish, it is evident that 

 with respect to these coasts, at least, it cannot be claimed on the part 

 of Great Britain that it was 



understood that the liberty of taking, drying, and curing fish, granted 

 in the preceding part of this article, shall not be construed to extend 

 to any privilege of carrying on trade with any of His Britannic 

 Majesty's subjects residing within the limits hereinbefore assigned 

 for the use of the fishermen of the United States, for any of the pur- 

 poses aforesaid. 



MAPS. 



The attention of the Tribunal is here directed to Maps No. I and 

 No. II, which form part of this Case, and on which the coasts covered 

 by the renunciatory clause of the treaty are colored light brown, and 

 the coasts referred to as " treaty coasts " in the Special Agreement of 

 January 27, 1909 are colored green and red ; those colored green being 

 the coasts on which. the American fishermen have the liberty both of 

 taking fish and of drying and curing them, and those colored red 

 being the coasts on which they have the liberty of taking fish but not 

 of drying or curing them. 



