Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 25.djvu/1435

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1396 POSTAL CONVENTION—JAMAICA. JULY 22, 1887. ARTICLE XI. Fm W b° ’°°°·*¤¤d· Each country shall retain to its own use the whole of the postages, registration and delivery fees, it collects on said packages ; consequently, this Convention will give rise to no separate accounts between the two countries. Anrionm XII. F¤¤¤¤¤‘¤S¤‘¤**¤¤¤· The Postmaster-General of the United States of America, and the Postmaster of Jamaica, shall have authority to jointly make such further regulations of order and detail as may be found necessary to carry out the present Convention from time to time ; and may, by agreement, (prescribe conditions for the admission in packages exchanged un er this Convention of any of the articles prohibited by Article II. ` Anrrcmn XIII. du‘Q‘g'{{§{f“°°m°“‘““ This Convention shall take eifect and operations_thereunder shall begin on the nrst day of October, 1887, and shall continue in force until terminated by mutual agreement, but may be annulled at the desge of Ipither Department, upon six months’ previous notice given to the other. Done in duplicate, and signed at Washington the twenty-second da of July, 1887, and at Kingston, the third day of September, 1887. émnn.] WM. F. V LAS, Postmaster- General of the United States. H. W. NORMAN, . Governor of Jamaica. www The foregoing Parcel Post Convention between Jamaica and the United States of America, has been negotiated and concluded with my advice and consent, and is hereby a proved and ratified. n testimony whereof I have caused the Great Seal of the United States to be hereunto affixed. [snAL.l GROVER CLEVELAND. By the President: T. F. BAYARD. Secretary of State. Wasniuerox, September 15th, 1887.