Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 8.djvu/499

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

CONVENTION WITH PERU-BOLIVIA. lr V6. 487 it is further declared, that whatever indulgence, in trade or otherwise, lu me of war. shall be granted to any of the Christian Powers, the citizens of the mm m°¤°h" United States shall be equally entitled to them. :2-:¥£d§:f°m° Arvr. 25. This treaty shall continue in force, with the help of God, Treatytolast for fifty years; after the expiration of which term, the treaty shall con- my Y°*"“· ‘l‘°‘ tinue to be binding on both parties, until the one shall give twelve months’ notice to the other, of an intention to abandon it; in which case, its operations shall cease at the end of the twelve months. Consulate of the United States of America. For the Empire of Morocco. l -1-0 Au. wnoiu IT may coucenu. Be it known. Whereas the undersigned, James R. Leib, a citizen of the United States of North America, and now their resident consul at Tangier, having been duly appointed commissioner, by letters patent, under the signature of the President and seal of the United States of North America, bearing date, at the city of Washington, the 4th day of July A. D. 1835, for negotiating and concluding a treaty of peace and friendship between the United States of Nort America and the Empire of Morocco; I, therefore, James R. Leib, Commissioner as aforesaid, do conclude the foregoing treaty and every article and clause therein contained; reserving the same, nevertheless, for the final ratilica- _Final mi5c•· tion of the President of the United States of North America, by and ¥,°¤ fgsggilfgl with the advice and consent of the Senate. ws e` In testimony whereof; I have hereunto allixed my signature, and the seal of this consulate, on the lst day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty-six, and of the Independence of the United States the sixty-first. JAMES R.. LEIB, (1.. s.) GENERAL CONVENTION OF PEACE, FRIENDSHIP, COMMERCE. AND NAVIGATION, Between the United States of America and the Peru- Nov. 1s,1836, Bolivian Ooimederation. aaiaaeiasn. exchanged, Tm: United States of America and the Peru-Bolivian Confederation, 1v{}g,j2;,:£?:,, desiring to make firm and permanent the peace and friendship which of thePresidem happily subsist between them, have resolved to fix, in a clear, distinct, of ah; [hg; and positive manner, the rules which shall, in future, be religiously lfegcé md` observed between the one and the other, by means of a treaty, or general friendship. convention of peace, friendship, commerce, and navigation. For this desirable purpose, the President of the United States of Negotiatora. America has conferred full powers on Samuel Larned, Charge d’AfZ faires of the said States, near the Government of Peru; and the Supreme Protector of the north and south Peruvian States, President of the Republic of Bolivia, enoharged with the direction of the foreign relations of the Pern-Bolivian Confederation, has conferred like powers on John Garcia del Rio, Minister of State in the Department of Finance