Lapas attēli
PDF
ePub

Volume III, 1910-1923, continuing Volumes I and II above,
Senate Document No. 348, 67th Congress, 4th session,
1923 (abbreviation: Treaties, etc., III);

Treaties and Other International Acts of the United States of
America, two volumes (to date), edited by Hunter Miller
and published by the Government Printing Office; namely,
Volume 1 (short print), plan of the edition, lists, and tables.
Department of State, Publication No. 237;

Volume 2, 1776-1818, being documents 1-40. Department
of State, Publication No. 175 (abbreviation: Miller,
Treaties, 2);

League of Nations Treaty Series.

The word "treaty" is used in its generic sense of an international engagement and not with any particular or technical sense.

December 31, 1932.

[blocks in formation]

I. PROMOTION OF PEACE

ARBITRATION, CONCILIATION, AND JUDICIAL
SETTLEMENT

MULTILATERAL TREATIES

Convention for the pacific settlement of international disputes. (First International Peace Conference.)

Signed at The Hague July 29, 1899; ratifications deposited with the Government of the Netherlands September 4, 1900; proclaimed by the President of the United States November 1, 1901.

Effective September 4, 1900.

Article XCI of the convention for the pacific settlement of international disputes signed at The Hague October 18, 1907, provides that it shall replace the present convention as between its contracting powers. The parties to the convention of 1899 which are not parties to the convention of 1907 are Argentina, Bulgaria, Chile, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Great Britain, Greece, Italy, Paraguay, Persia, Peru, Turkey, Uruguay, Venezuela, and Yugoslavia. 32 Stat. (pt. 2), 1779.

Treaty Series, No. 392.
Malloy, Treaties, II, 2016.

Convention for the pacific settlement of international disputes. (Second International Peace Conference.)

Signed at The Hague October 18, 1907; ratifications deposited with the Government of the Netherlands November 27, 1909; proclaimed by the President of the United States February 28, 1910. Effective January 26, 1910.

The countries in respect of which the convention is now in force as a result of ratification or adherence are the United States of America, Austria, Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, China, Cuba, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Guatemala, Haiti, Hungary, Japan, Luxembourg, Mexico, the Netherlands, Nicaragua, Norway, Panama, Poland, Portugal, Rumania, Russia, El Salvador, Siam, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland.

1

« iepriekšējāTurpināt »