Government that the greatest benefits to the entire country can be secured through it, and this volume cannot be more fittingly closed than by again referring to the words of Joseph Story, that had the framers of the Constitution done nothing else than to securely vest the treaty-making power in the Central Government, they would been entitled to immortality, and to the unending gratitude of the American people. 403 ADDITIONAL EXTRADITION CASES. In re Dugan, U. S. Dist. Ct. Mass. 1874, 2 Lowell, 367, Fed. Cas. 4120, LOWELL, J. Person extradited under treaty with Great Britain, 1842, need not be confronted with witnesses; prisoner remanded. In re Heilbronn, U. S. Dist. Ct. S. D. N. Y. 1854, Fed. Cas. 6323, INGERSOLL, J. Sufficiency of evidence; prisoner remanded. In re Peter Kelley, U. S. Dist. Ct. Mass. 1874, 2 Lowell, 339, Fed. Cas. 7655, Lowell, J. Power of judiciary to issue warrant without application to executive. What crimes covered by treaty; prisoner discharged. Lascelles vs. Georgia, U. S. Sup. Ct. 1893, 148 U. S. 537, JACKSON, J. Affects state rendition; authorities and laws cited. ADDITIONAL FRENCH SPOLIATION CASES. Blagge vs. Balch, (also Brooks vs. Codman and Foote vs. Woman's Board of Missions decided at same time) U. S. Sup. Ct. 1896, 162 U. S. 439, FULLER, J. Payments to next of kin of bankrupts and not to assignees under act of March 3, 1891 (26 Stat. 908) brought the French Spoliation payments in the " category of payment by way of gratuity and grace, and not as of right and against the government." 404 TREATIES APPENDIX. INTRODUCTORY NOTE. The following APPENDIX contains all the treaties and conventions (other than postal), which have been concluded between the United States and foreign powers, and which have been ratified by the Senate. It also contains all the diplomatic agreements, protocols, modi vivendi and proclamations affecting the relations of the United States and foreign powers, which have been published in the United States Statutes at Large, the Official compilations of Treaties and Conventions of the United States, Richardson's Messages and Papers of the President, and Moore's History of International Arbitration. The arrangement is alphabetical as to countries, the various treaties and conventions with each being arranged chronologically, the proclamations following the treaties. For the different forms of international agreements entered into by the United States, see note 2, § 463, pp. 367, et seq, ante. (Treaties and conventions, p. 367; declarations of accession, p. 368; modi vivendi, p. 369; protocols and agreements, p. 370; reciprocal legislation and proclamations, p. 372.) No treaties with Indians are included in this appendix. (For volumes containing these treaties, see chap. XIV, § 405, n. 1, pp. 200 and 201, ante. ) Orange Free State, Treaty and Convention.. Papal States, Proclamations..... Paraguay, Treaty and Convention.. Proclamation... Persia, Treaty...... Peru, Treaties and Conventions.. Proclamation....... Peru-Bolivia, Convention... Portugal, Treaties and Conventions. Proclamations.... Prussia, Treaties aud Conventions.. Proclamation..... Roumania, Convention.. Russia, Treaties and Conventions.. Salvador, Treaties and Conventions. Proclamations...... Diplomatic Correspondence... Samoan Islands, Treaties and Conventions.. PAGE 471 471 472 472 472 . 473 473 474 474 474 481 482 483 484 484 486 486 486 487 487 488 488 488 489 489 489 490 491 491 492 492 492 495 495 495 496 497 498 498 499 501 501 502 502 |