Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 18 Part 3.djvu/880

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
850
PROGLAMATIONS


No. 9. Oct 27»1874· ny run rnnsinnm or run-Uurrnn smrns or Annexes.

A PROCLAMATION.

Preamble

We are reminded by the changing seasons that it is time to pause in our daily avocations, and offer thanks to Almighty God for the mercies and abundance of the year which is drawing to a close.

The blessings of free government continue to be vouchsafed to us; the earth has responded to the labor of the husbandman; the land has been free from pestilence; internal order is being maintained, and peace with other powers has prevailed.

It is fitting that at stated periods we should cease from our accustomed pursuits and from the turmoil of our daily lives, and unite in thankfulness for the blessings of the past, and in the cultivation of kindly feelings toward each other.

Nov. 26, 1874, set for a day of thanksgiving.

Now, therefore, recognizing these considerations, I, Ulysses S. Grant, President of the United States, do recommend to all citizens to assemble in their respective places of worship on Thursday, the twenty-sixth day of November next, and express their thanks for the mercy and favor of Almighty God, and laying aside all political contentions and all secular occupations, to observe such day as a day of rest, thanksgiving, and praise.

In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand, and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed.

Done at the city of Washington this twenty-seventh day of October, SEAL in the year of our Lord 1874, and of the Independence of the [ '] United States the ninety-ninth. I U. S. GRANT. By the President; HAMILTON Fisn, Secretary of State. V No. 10. ’ oct. 29, 1874. . __ BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. A PROOLAMATION. Preamble. Whereas, pursuant to the second section of the act of Congress approved the 23d of March last, entitled "An act to authorize the 1,,74, mcg, ,,,,,8 President to accept for citizens of the United States the jurisdiction 23, of certain tribunalsin the Ottoman dominions and Egypt, established or to·be established under the authority of the Sublime Porte and of the government of Egypt," the President is authorized, for the benefit of American citizens residing in the Turkish dominions, to accept the recent law of the Ottoman Porte ceding the right of foreigners possessing immovable property in said dominions ; · And whereas, pursuant to the authority thus in me vested, I have authorized George H. Boker, accredited as Minister Resident of the United States to the Ottoman Porte, to sign, on behalf of this Governmen t, the Protocol accepting the law aforesaid of the said Ottoman Porte ; which Protocol and law are, word for word, as follows z [Translation.] . The United. States of America and His Majesty the Sultan being desirous to establish by a special act the agreement entered upon between them regarding the admission of American citizens to the right