Commission appointments. Extension of time. January 7-12, 1915- Arbitration. Extension of 1908 convention. Washington. March 30, Arbitration. Requisitioned shipping. Washington. June 30, 1921– Delimitation of Canal Zone. Panama. June 15, 1904- Colon. Provisional delimitation of city and harbor_ Panama. Provisional delimitation of city and harbor_. Executive decree, War Department. Panama. December 3, 1904- Executive decree, War Department. Washington, January 7, 1905. Declaration of values on exports. Washington. April 17, 1913. Control of wireless telegraphic stations. Panama. August 29, 1914. Boundary. Panama. September 2, 1914-- Neutrality. Washington. October 10, 1914__. Determination of damages caused by riot at Panama City. Panama. Traveling salesmen. Washington. February 8, 1919_. Extradition. Asuncion. March 26, 1913. Advancement of peace. Asuncion. August 29, 1914. Advancement of peace. Lima. July 14, 1914- Arbitration. Landreau claim. Lima. May 21, 1921.. Most-favored-nation treatment; terms Porto and Madeira"; subsi- Arbitration. Extension of 1908 convention. Washington. June 28, 1913. 2808 Advancement of peace. Lisbon. February 4, 1914_ Commission appointments. Extension of time. November 16, 1915. Arbitration. Extension of 1908 convention. Lisbon. September 14, 1920. Revision of former treaties. Washington. December 16, 1920_. Protocol. Jurisdiction in Siam. Washington. December 16, 1920.. Arbitration. Extension of 1908 convention. Washington. May 29, 1913 2839 Mining interests or mining rights of Spaniards in Mexico. Washington. Arbitration. Extension of 1908 convention. Washington. November 3, 2858 Sanitary. Denunciation. Paris. December 3, 1903- Pecuniary claims. Rio de Janeiro. August 13, 1906– Status of naturalized citizens. Rio de Janeiro. International Law Commission. Rio de Janeiro. Wireless telegraph. Berlin. November 3, 1906.... Arbitration of pecuniary claims. Buenos Aires. August 11, 1910_ Literary and artistic copyright. Buenos Aires. August 11, 1910__. Protection of inventions, patents, designs, and industrial models. Buenos Sanitary. Paris. January 17, 1912. Appendix I: Passage through Egyptian territory_- Egyptian ministerial decree. Cairo. June 19, 1893. Suppression of abuse of opium and other drugs. The Hague. Jan- Protocole de clôture. The Hague. Radiotelegraph. London. July 5, 1912_ Service regulations affixed. London. July, 1912_ Abolition of foreign settlements in Chosen. Seoul. April 21, 1913___. Restraint of arms and ammunition trade in China. Peking. May 5, 1919_ Resolution; advice and consent of Senate. March 27, 1922_ Limitation of naval armament. Washington. February 6, 1922 Protection of lives of neutrals and noncombatants at sea in time of war; prevention of use of noxious gases and chemicals. Washington. Feb- Extraterritoriality in China. Washington. December 10, 1921. Foreign postal agencies in China. Washington. February 1, 1922. Armed forces in China. Washington. February 1, 1922. Unification of railways in China; Chinese declaration. Washington. Instruments by virtue of which rights, privileges, indemnities, repara- tions, or advantages are or may be claimed by the United States___ Treaties due to the negotiations of the Paris Peace Conference, signed by repre- sentatives of the United States, on which no further action has been taken. Instruments included after volume was paged, listed in place in Contents. 3819 AUSTRIA. TREATY ESTABLISHING FRIENDLY RELATIONS. Signed at Vienna August 24, 1921; ratification advised by the Sen ate October 18, 1921; ratified by the President October 21, 1921; ratified by Austria October 8, 1921; ratifications exchanged at Vienna November 8, 1921; proclaimed November 17, 1921. (Treaty Series, No. 659; 42 Statutes at Large.) ARTICLES, Preamble reciting pertinent stipulation of joint resolution of Congress of July 2, 1921. I. Rights, privileges, etc., of United States under treaty of St. Germain-en-Laye. II. Parts of that treaty under which United States does and does not claim rights, privileges, etc. III. Ratification, The United States of America and Austria: Considering that the United States, acting in conjunction with its cobelligerents, entered into an Armistice with Austria-Hungary on November 3, 1918, in order that a Treaty of Peace might be concluded; Considering that the former Austro-Hungary Monarchy ceased to exist and was replaced in Austria by a republican Government; Considering that the Treaty of St. Germain-en-Laye, to which Austria is a party, was signed on September 10, 1919, and came into force according to the terms of its Article 381, but has not been ratified by the United States; Considering that the Congress of the United States passed a joint Resolution approved by the President July 2d, 1921, which reads, in part, as follows: "Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, * * * "That the state of war declared to exist between the Imperial and Royal Austro-Hungarian Government and the United States of America by the joint resolution of Congress approved December 7th, 1917, is hereby declared at an end. "SEC. 4. That in making this declaration, and as a part of it, there are expressly reserved to the United States of America and its nationals any and all rights, privileges, indemnities, reparations, or advantages, together with the right to enforce the same, to which it or they have become entitled under the terms of the armistice signed Novmeber 3d, 1918, or any extension or modifications thereof; or which were acquired by or are in the possession of the United States For text see p. 3141. 29479-S. Doc. 348, 67-4-3 2493 |