Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 19.djvu/652

 626 CONVENTION—Hr&WAIIAN ISLANDS. JAN. 30, 1875. Aurrorn I1. Am°1‘l°¤¤ PM- For and in consideration of the rights and privileges granted by the g;:,E;d;€1?B6;°f?(,\;';d` United States of America in the preceding article of this convention, y‘ and as an equivalent therefor, Uis Majesty, the King oi' the Hawaiian Islands hereby agrees to admit all the articles named in the following schedule, the same being the growth, manufacture or produce of the United States of America, into all the ports of the Hawaiian Islands, free of duty. SCHEDULE. Schedule- Agricultural implements; animals; beef, bacon, pork, ham and all fresh, smoked or preserved meats; boots and shoes; grain, ilour, meal and bran, bread and breadstuffs, of all kinds; bricks, lime and cement; butter, cheese, lard, tallow, bullion; coal; cordago, naval stores including tar, pitch, resin, turpentine raw and rectified ; copper and composition sheathing; nails and bolts; cotton and manufactures of cotton bleached, and unbleached, and whether or not colored, stained, painted or printed; eggs; fish and oysters, and all other creatures living in the water, and the products thereof; fruits, nuts, and vegetables, green, dried or undried, preserved or unpreserved; hardware; hides, furs, skins and pelts, dressed or undressed; hoop iron, and rivets, nails, spikes and bolts, tacks, brads or sprigs; ice; iron and steel and manufactures thereof; leather; lumber and timber of all kinds, round, hewed, sawed, and uninanul'acturcd in whole or in part; doors, sashes and blinds; machinery ot all kinds, engines and parts thereof; oats and hay ; paper, stationery and books, and all manufactures of paper or of paper and wood ; petroleum and all oils for lubricating or illuminating purposes; plants, shrubs, trees and seeds; rice; sugar, refined or unrctined; salt; soap; shocks, staves and headings; wool and manufactures of wool, other than ready made clothing; wagons and carts for the purposes of agriculture or of drayage; wood and manufactures of wood, or of wood and metal except furniture either upholstered or carved and carriages ; textile manutactures, made of a combination of wool, cotton, silk or linen, or of any two or more of them other than when ready made clothing; harness and all manufactures of leather; starch; and tobacco, whether in leaf or manufactured. Anricmr Ill. Evidence as to The evidence that articles proposed to be admitted into the ports of srowtli. m¤¤¤¤f¤¤t— the United States of America, or the ports of the Hawaiian Islands, free ]nl‘"°*. &°¤ MW °”' of dutv, under the first and second articles of this convention are the alilislied. * . ., ’ . growth, manuiacture or produce of the United States of America or of the Hawaiian Islands respectively shall be established under such rules and regulations and conditions for the protection of the revenue as the two Governments may trom time to time respectively prescribe. ARTICLE IV. No export duty No export duty or charges shall be imposed in the Hawaiian Islands };_’0,l’f;l_;;‘;{;‘;S“‘1 °“ or in the United States, upon any of the articles proposed to be admit- ’" ted into the ports of the United States or the ports of the Hawaiian Islands tree of duty, under the first and second articles of this convention. It is agreed, on the part of His Hawaiian Majesty, that, so long No mss, gm, of as this treaty shall remain in force, he will not lease or otherwise dispose Iiawamm p o nts, of or create any lien upon any port, harbor, or other territory in his do- minions, or grant any special privilege or rights of use therein, to any ilwcs as, UBI; ted other power, state or government, nor make any treaty by which any sri2t0S_ other nation shall obtain the same privileges, relative to the admission of any articles iree of duty, hereby secured to the United States.