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PROMOTION OF PEACE

CONTENTS

ARBITRATION, CONCILIATION, And Judicial Settlement
Bilateral treaties of arbitration and conciliation.

Permanent Court of International Justice . .

Article 36 of the Statute of the Permanent Court of International
Justice

ARMAMENT REDUCTION

London naval treaty of 1930.

Washington naval treaty of 1922 .

INTERNATIONAL LAW

Convention and protocols adopted at the Conference for the Codification of International Law, The Hague, 1930.

Convention on rights and duties of states

MUTUAL GUARANTEES

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Nonaggression pact between Poland and the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics.

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Nonaggression pact and conciliation convention between Estonia and
the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

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HUMANITARIAN

EDUCATION

Third International Conference on Public Instruction. EXTRADITION

Convention on extradition.

Supplementary extradition treaty between the United States and
Sweden

Extradition treaty between the United States and Turkey.
HEALTH

International sanitary convention for air navigation

International sanitary convention

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International agreement relating to statistics of causes of death NATIONALITY

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Convention on the nationality of women OPIUM AND OTHER DANGEROUS DRUGS

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Convention for limiting the manufacture and regulating the distribution of narcotic drugs.

9

SOCIAL

Convention and statute establishing an international relief union. . WOMEN AND CHILDREN

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Convention for the suppression of the traffic in women of full age. . .

12

ECONOMIC

AVIATION

Convention relating to the regulation of aerial navigation.
Convention for the unification of certain rules relating to interna-
tional transportation by air . .

13

13

Danish regulations applicable to flights by American aircraft

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33

ECONOMIC-Continued

COMMERCE

Page

Treaty of friendship, commerce, and consular rights between the

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Agreement to refrain from invoking the obligations of the most-
favored-nation clause in respect of certain multilateral con-
ventions

FINANCE

International convention for the suppression of counterfeiting currency, and protocol. . .

Conventions of the International Conferences for the Unification of Laws on Bills of Exchange, Promissory Notes, and Cheques.

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Certain conventions of the International Labor Conference

Amendment to article 393 of the Treaty of Versailles and the corresponding articles of the other treaties of peace.

NAVIGATION

Load line convention between the United States and Canada.. POSTAL

Universal postal convention and subsidiary agreements TELECOMMUNICATIONS

International telecommunication convention.

International radio convention.

MISCELLANEOUS

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Convention on the protection of movable property of historic value.
International Geographical Congress

TEXTS OF TREATIES AND AGREEMENTS

Agreement to refrain from invoking the obligations of the mostfavored-nation clause in respect of certain multilateral conventions . .

RECENT PUBLICATIONS

2245

2265

28

30

PROMOTION OF PEACE

ARBITRATION, CONCILIATION, AND JUDICIAL
SETTLEMENT

BILATERAL TREATIES OF ARBITRATION AND CONCILIATION

United States-Albania

The American Minister to Albania informed the Secretary of State by a despatch dated June 14, 1934, that the Ministry for Foreign Affairs had advised the Legation by a note verbale of June 12, 1934, of the appointment of Mr. Albert Calmes, of Luxemburg, as the nonnational member for Albania on the commission of inquiry provided for by the conciliation treaty between the United States and Albania, signed October 22, 1928.

The membership of the commission is as follows:

United States commissioners:

National: Mr. Allen W. Dulles

Nonnational: Señor Victor M. Maúrtua, of Peru
Albanian commissioners:

National: Mr. Faik Konitza

Nonnational: Mr. Albert Calmes, of Luxemburg

Joint commissioner:

Señor Manuel Márquez Sterling, of Cuba

Denmark-Greece

The American Legation at Copenhagen transmitted, to the Department of State with a despatch dated June 30, 1934, copies of a treaty of conciliation, arbitration, and judicial settlement between Denmark and Greece, signed April 13, 1933. The treaty, which has been ratified by the Danish Rigsdag, will enter into force upon the exchange of ratifications.

Denmark-Venezuela

The American Minister to Denmark transmitted to the Secretary of State with a despatch dated June 30, 1934, copies of a treaty of arbitration, judicial settlement, and conciliation between Denmark and Venezuela, signed December 19, 1933. The treaty was ratified by the Danish Rigsdag in May 1934. It will enter into force upon the exchange of ratifications and will remain in force for a period

of 10 years.

PERMANENT COURT OF INTERNATIONAL JUSTICE

ARTICLE 36 OF THE STATUTE OF THE PERMANENT COURT OF INTER1 NATIONAL JUSTICE

Hungary

The Secretary General of the League of Nations informed the Secretary of State by a circular letter dated June 14, 1934, that a declaration renewing the acceptance by the Hungarian Government of the optional clause provided in the protocol of signature of the Statute of the Permanent Court of International Justice, Geneva, December 16, 1920, was signed by the Hungarian Delegate to the League of Nations on May 30, 1934. The declaration is quoted below from the translation as furnished by the League of Nations:

"On behalf of the Royal Hungarian Government and subject to ratification, I recognise, in relation to any other Member or State accepting the same obligation, that is to say, on condition of reciprocity, the jurisdiction of the Court as compulsory ipso facto and without special convention, in conformity with Article 36, paragraph 2 of the Statute of the Court, for a further period of five years as from August 13, 1934.

66

Geneva, May 30, 1934.

66 LADISLAS DE TAHY."

ARMAMENT REDUCTION

LONDON NAVAL TREATY OF 1930

Great Britain

By a note dated June 27, 1934, the British Embassy at Washington informed the Department of State, in accordance with the provisions of article 10 of the London naval treaty, of the laying of the keels of His Majesty's ships Narwhal, Sea Wolf, and Penelope. Particulars of these vessels are given as follows:

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Date of laying keel: May 29, 1934

Standard displacement: 1,520 tons (1,544 metric tons)
Length at waterline: 280 feet

Extreme beam at or below waterline: 25 feet 6 inches

Mean draft at standard displacement: 15 feet 1 inch
Caliber of largest gun: 4 inches

See Bulletin No. 44, May 1933, p. 2.

H.M.S. Sea Wolf

Classification: Submarine

Date of laying keel: May 25, 1934

Standard displacement: 670 tons (681 metric tons)
Length at waterline: 191 feet 6 inches

Extreme beam at or below waterline: 24 feet

Mean draft at standard displacement: 10 feet 6 inches
Caliber of largest gun: 3 inches

H.M.S. Penelope

Japan

Classification: Cruiser

Date of laying keel: May 30, 1934

Standard displacement: 5,200 tons (5,285 metric tons)
Length at waterline: 500 feet

Extreme beam at or below waterline: 51 feet

Mean draft at standard displacement: 13 feet 10 inches
Caliber of largest gun: 6 inches

By a note dated July 7, 1934, the Japanese Chargé d'Affaires ad interim at Washington informed the Secretary of State, in accordance with the provisions of article 10 of the London naval treaty, of the laying of the keel of No. B-34, a submarine of the Imperial Japanese Navy, particulars of the vessel being given as follows:

Date of laying keel: April 25, 1934

Standard displacement: 700 tons (711 metric tons)
Length at waterline: 73.00 meters

Extreme beam: 6.70 meters

Mean draft at standard displacement: 3.25 meters
Caliber of largest gun: 7.6 centimeters

United States

By a letter dated June 2, 1934, the Secretary of the Navy informed the Secretary of State of the laying of the keel of the U.S.S. Yorktown on May 21, 1934. The following particulars of this vessel have been furnished to the governments parties to the London naval treaty:

Classification: Aircraft carrier

Standard displacement (estimated): 20,000 tons (20,320 metric tons)

Length at waterline: 762 feet

Extreme beam at or below water line: 83 feet 2 inches

Mean draft at standard displacement: 21 feet 9 inches
Caliber of largest gun: 5 inches

By a letter dated June 28, 1934, the Acting Secretary of the Navy informed the Secretary of State of the completion on June 20, 1934,

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