Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 36 Part 2.djvu/1197

 2638 PROCLAMATIONS, 1910. evidence shall be presented to the President that the Government of the Principality of Liechtenstein has made such change or changes in its present laws or regulations affecting American commerce in Liechtenstein as to discriminate unduly in any way against such commerce, and in the further event t at a proclamation by the President of such fact, revoking the present proclamation, shall have been issued. IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be aflixed. DONE at the City of Washington, this twenty-fourth day of March, A. D. one thousand nine hundred and ten, and of the [SEAL.] Independence o_f the United States of America the one hundred and thirty-fourth. Wm H Tam By the President: P C KNOx Secretary of State. A PROCLAMATION. · www 1>¤•d¤¤¤¤f WHEREAS it is rovided in the Act of Congress approved August xgrilggiiisie. 5, 1909, entitled "l£n Act To provide revenue, equalihe dut1es and ·*”‘°·P·'”· encourage the industries of the United States, and for other pur- \ That from and after the thirty-first day of March, nineteen hundred and ten, ` except as otherwise specially rovided for in this section, there shall be levied, I collected, and paid on all articlles when imported from ariy foreign countiby into the United States, or into any of its tposessions (except the hilippine Islan s and the islands of Guam and Tutuila), e rates of duty prmcribed y the schedules and paragraphs of the dutiable list of section one o t is Act, and in addition thereto twenty-five per centum ad valorem; which rates shall constitute the maximum tariff of the United States: Provided That whenever, after the thirty-first da of March, nineteen hundred and ten, and so long thereafter as the resident shall be satisfied, in view of the character of the concessions granted by the minimum tariff of the United States, that the government of any foreign country imposes no terms or restrictions, either in the way of tariff rates or provisions, trade or other regulations, charges, exactions, or in anfy other manner, directly or indirectly, upon the importation into or the sale in such oreign country of aréy agricultural, manufactured, or other product of the United States, which unduly_ iscriminate against the United States or the products thereof, and that such foreign country pakys no export bount or imposes no export duty or prohibition upon the exgortation 0 any article to the Ulhited States which unduly discriminates against the nited States or the products thereof, and that such foreign country accords to the agricultural, manufactured, or other products of the United States treatment which is reciprocal and equivalent, thereu n and thereafter, upon proclamation to this effect by the President of the UnitedxStates, all articles when imported into the United States, or an of its possessions (except the Phili pine Islands and the islands of Guam and 'llhtuila), from such foreign country shall, except as otherwise herein provided, be admitted under the terms of the minimum tariff of the United States as prescribed by section one of this Act. AND Wnmnrms satisfactory evidence has been presented to me that the Government of the Pr1nc1pali?r of Monaco imposes no terms or restr1ctions,_e1ther in the way 0 tariff rates or provisions, trade or other regulations, charges, exactions, or in any other manner, directly or indirectly, upon the importation into or the sale in Monaco of any agricultural, manufactured, or other product of the United States, which unduly discriminate against the United States or the pfoducts thereof, and that the Government of the Principality of onaco pays no export bounty or imposes no ex ort duty or prohibition upon the exportation of any article to the United States which unduly discrimrnates against the United States or the products thereof, and that the vemment of the Principality of Monaco
 * ·¤¤¤¤24» 1910- BY ·r1-m PRESIDENT or THE UNITED Srnns OF Amnmca.