 | United States. Department of State - Canals - 1880 - 152 pages
...and occupy houses and warehouses for the purpose of their commerce ; and generally the merchants and traders of each nation, respectively, shall enjoy...complete protection and security for their commerce, subject always to the laws and statutes of the two countries respectively. In like manner the respective... | |
 | International law - 1910
...occupy houses and warehouses for the purposes of their commerce ; and, generally, the merchants and traders of each nation, respectively, shall enjoy the most complete protection and security tor their commerce; subject always to the laws and statutes of the two countries respectively. In like... | |
 | Permanent Court of Arbitration - Fisheries - 1912
...occupy houses and warehouses for the purposes of their commerce; and, generally, the merchants and traders of each nation, respectively, shall enjoy...and statutes of the two countries, respectively." And in article 3, the provision regarding outlying dominions of the British Empire (reading from the... | |
 | 1912
...occupy houses and warehouses for the purposes of their commerce; and, generally, the merchants and traders of each nation, respectively, shall enjoy...protection and security for their commerce, but subject ahcays to the laws and statutes of the two countries respectively. Then, in the second section is this... | |
 | Permanent Court of Arbitration - Fisheries - 1913
...occupy houses and warehouses for the purposes of their commerce; and, generally, the merchants and traders of each nation, respectively, shall enjoy...complete protection and security for their commerce; subject always to the laws and statutes of the two countries respectively." Colombia, 1825 (III, p.... | |
 | United States - 1912
...ware-' houses for the purposes for 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 the laws and statutes of the two countries respectively. ARTICLE... | |
 | 1913
...occupy houses and warehouses for the purposes of their commerce; and, generally, the merchants and traders of each nation, respectively, shall enjoy...complete protection and security for their commerce. " In like manner, the respective ships of war, and post-office packets of the two countries, shall... | |
 | Edward Samuel Corwin - Constitutional law - 1913 - 321 pages
...trading purposes in mind. And it is further stipulated that the rights thus reciprocally granted are " subject always . . . to the laws and statutes of the two countries respectively," a provision which, taken literally, at least would not have prevented the several States from imposing... | |
 | Charles H. Stockton - International law - 1914 - 616 pages
...any article the growth, produce, or manufacture of the Dominican Republic or of her fisheries; and no higher or other duty shall be imposed on the importation into the Dominican Republic of any article of growth, produce or manufacture of the United States or its... | |
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