Obrázky stránek
PDF
ePub

116. The Treaty Rights of Aliens, by William Howard Taft. July, 1917.

117. The Effect of Democracy on International Law, by Elihu Root. August. 1917.

118. The Problem of Nationality. Part III of The Principle of Nationality. by Theodore Ruyssen. September, 1917.

119. Official Documents Looking Toward Peace, Series III. October, 1917. 120. The United States and Great Britain, by Walter H. Page. The British Commonwealth of Nations, by Lieutenant-General J. C. Smuts. America and Freedom, by Viscount Grey. November, 1917.*

121. The Conference on the Foreign Relations of the United States, held at Long Beach, N. Y., May 28-June 1, 1917. An Experiment in Education, by Stephen Pierce Duggan. December, 1917.

122. The Aims of the War: Letter of Lord Lansdowne to the London Daily Telegraph, November 29, 1917. Reply by Cosmos printed in the New York Times, December 1, 1917. The President's Address to the Congress, December 4, 1917. January, 1918.

123. Victory or Defeat: No Half-way House, speech delivered by the Rt. Hon. David Lloyd George, December 14, 1917; British Labor's War Aims, statement adopted at the Special National Labor Conference at Central Hall, Westminster, December 28, 1917; Great Britain's War Aims, speech delivered by the Rt. Hon. David Lloyd George at the Trade Union Conference on Man Power, January 5, 1918; Labor's After-War Economic Policy, by Rt. Hon. Arthur Henderson, M.P.; America's Terms of Settlement, address by President Wilson to the Congress, January 8, 1918. British Labor Party's Address to the Russian People, January 15, 1918. February, 1918.

124. The United States and Japan: text of the Root-Takahira Understanding of November 30, 1908, and of the Lansing-Ishii Agreement of November 3, 1917; Japan and the United States, address by the Hon. Elihu Root, October 1, 1917; The Lansing-Ishii Agreement, address by the Hon. James L. Slayden, November 15, 1917; What of Our Fears of Japan? by Kenneth S. Latourette. March, 1918.

125. The Awakening of the German People, by Otfried Nippold. April, 1918. 126. The Anniversary of America's Entry into the War: An address delivered

by President Wilson at Baltimore, Maryland, April 6, 1918; an article written for The Daily Chronicle of London by Professor Gilbert Murray. May, 1918.

127. The Lichnowsky Memorandum: Introduction and translation by Munroe Smith, German text from the Berliner Börsen-Courier, Appendix by Munroe Smith and Henry F. Munro; Reply of Herr von Jagow. June, 1918.

128. America and the Russian Dilemma, by Jerome Landfield. The German Peace Treaties with the Ukraine, Russia, Finland and Rumania. The Constitution of Middle Europe, by Friedrich Naumann. July, 1918.

129. A Voice from Germany: Why German Peace Declarations Fail to Convince, by Professor F. W. Foerster. Austria's Peace Proposals: The Letter to Prince Sixtus. August, 1918.

130. Memoranda and Letters of Dr. Muehlon: Introduction and translation by Munroe Smith, German text and Appendix. September, 1918. 131. The League of Nations, by Viscount Grey of Falloden and Nicholas Murray Butler; Labor and the League of Nations, by Ordway Tead; The European Commission of the Danube, by Edward Krehbiel; Address by President Wilson at the Metropolitan Opera House, New York, September 27, 1918. October, 1918.

132. The "Lusitania": Opinion of Court, United States District Court, Southern District of New York-In the matter of the petition of the Cunard Steamship Company, limited, as owners of the Steamship "Lusitania," for limitation of its liability. November, 1918.

133. Official Documents Looking toward Peace, Series No. IV. December, 1918. 134. A League of Nations. Statements from the League of Free Nations Association, the League to Enforce Peace, the World's Court League and the League of Nations Union; speech delivered by Felix Calonder, ex-President of the Swiss Confederation before the National Council of Switzerland, June 6, 1918; article by Sir William Collins; address delivered by Charles R. Van Hise, late President of the University of Wisconsin, at the Wisconsin State Convention of the League to Enforce Peace; International Organization, an annotated reading list, by Frederick C. Hicks. January, 1919.

135. The Problems of Reconstruction: International and National, by Lindsay Rogers. February, 1919.

136. Russian Documents, including the Russian Constitution and the Russian Land Law; the Franco-Russian Alliance. March, 1919.*

137. The German Revolution: Documentary History of the German Revolution; Manifesto of the Spartacus Group; What Should Be Changed in Germany, by Charles Andler. April, 1919.

138. Palestine, by Richard Gottheil; The New Armenia: Claims at the Peace Conference, reprinted from the London Times: The Albanian Question, by Mehmed Bey Konitza; Memorandum submitted by the Albanian Delegation to the Peace Conference. May, 1919.

139. Documents regarding the Peace Conference: the Organization of the Peace Conference; General Sessions; the Covenant of the League of Nations; Speech delivered by President Wilson before the Peace Conference, April 28, 1919. June, 1919.

140. Report of the Commission on International Labor Legislation of the Peace Conference; The British National Industrial Conference: Report of the Provisional Joint Committee. July, 1919.

141. Northern Epirus and the Principle of Nationality, by N. J. Cassavetes; the Problem of Eastern Galicia, by Miroslav Sichinsky; Treaty signed by Poland and the Allied and Associated Powers. August, 1919.

142. Treaty of Peace with Germany. September, 1919.

143. Comments by the German Delegation on the Conditions of Peace.

October, 1919.

144. Reply of the Allied and Associated Powers to the Observations of the German Delegation on the Conditions of Peace. November, 1919. 145. Agreements between the United States and France and between England and France, June 28, 1919; Anglo-Persian Agreement, August 9, 1919. December, 1919.

Special Bulletins:

The United States and Australia, by Percival R. Cole. March, 1910.*
Opening Address at the Lake Mohonk Conference on International
Arbitration, by Nicholas Murray Butler. June, 1910.*

Mr. Carnegie's Letter to the Trustees of the Carnegie Endowment for
the Advancement of Peace, and Resolutions adopted by the Trustees.
January, 1911.*

Arbitration between Great Britain and the United States, by Cardinal
Gibbons. May, 1911.

International Arbitration, by Sir Charles Fitzpatrick. August, 1911.*
The Dawn of World Peace, by William Howard Taft, President of the
United States. November, 1911.*

Deutschland und Grossbritannien; eine Studie über Nationale Eigen-
tümlichkeiten, by Lord Haldane. (In German.)*

Address at Peace Dinner, December 30, by Andrew Carnegie. December, 1911.*

Great Britain and Germany; a Study in National Characteristics, by
Lord Haldane. March, 1912.*

War Practically Preventable and Arguments for Universal Peace, by
Rev. Michael Clune. June, 1912.*

Who Makes War? From the London Times. February, 1913.*

On Naval Armaments, by Rt. Hon. Winston Churchill. April, 1913.* Profit and Patriotism, and Money-Making and War. Reprints. May, 1913.*

A New Year's Letter from Baron d'Estournelles de Constant. December, 1913.

The A B C of the Panama Canal Controversy. Reprinted from the Con-
gressional Record, October 29, 1913. December, 1913.

Wanted-A Final Solution of the Japanese Problem, by Hamilton Holt.
January, 1914.*

The South American Point of View, by Charles Hitchcock Sherrill.
January, 1914.*

A Panama Primer. Reprinted from The Independent. March 30, 1914. April, 1914.*

The Causes Behind Mexico's Revolution, by Gilbert Reid. Reprint from the New York Times, April 27, 1914. June, 1914.*

The Japanese in California. June, 1914.*

The Changing Attitude toward War as Reflected in the American Press. September, 1914.

The Great War and Its Lessons, by Nicholas Murray Butler. October, 1914.*

Address of William H. Taft, May 17, 1914. October, 1914.

Contemporary War Poems. December, 1914.*

The War and Peace Problem, Material for the Study of International Polity, by John Mez. February, 1915.

Syllabus of Lectures on the War and Peace Problem for the Study of International Polity, by John Mez. February, 1915.

A Dozen Truths About Pacifism, by Alfred H. Fried. Translated by John
Mez. March, 1915.*

Educational Factors Toward Peace, by Leon Fraser. April, 1915.*
A Brief Outline of the Nature and Aims of Pacifism, by Alfred H. Fried.
Translated by John Mez. April, 1915.*

Internationalism. A list of Current Periodicals selected and annotated by Frederick C. Hicks. May, 1915.*

Spirit of Militarism and Non-Military Preparation for Defense, by John Lovejoy Elliott and R. Tait McKenzie. June, 1915.*

Existing Alliances and a League of Peace, by John Bates Clark. July, 1915.*

Is Commerce War? by Henry Raymond Mussey. January, 1916.
Peace Literature of the War, by John Mez. January, 1916.

Is There a Substitute for Force in International Relations? by Suh Hu. Prize essay, International Polity Club Competition, awarded June, 1916.

Labor's War Aims: Memorandum on War Aims, adopted by the InterAllied Labor and Socialist Conference, February 22, 1918; The Allied Cause is the Cause of Socialist Internationalism: Joint Manifesto of the Social Democratic League of America and the Jewish Socialist League. June, 1918.

The Dawn in Germany: The Lichnowsky and Other Disclosures, by James Brown Scott. November, 1918.

Yougoslavia, by M. I. Pupin; Declaration of Independence of the Mid-
European Union, October 26, 1918; Declaration of Independence of
the Czecho-Slovak Nation, October 18, 1918; Declaration of Corfu,
July 20, 1917. January, 1919.

Problems of the Peace Conference: American Opinion and Problems of
the Peace, an interview given to Edward Marshall by Nicholas Murray
Butler; A French Plan for a League of Nations: report given to the
Associated Press by Baron d'Estournelles de Constant. January, 1919.*
The League of Nations: Proposed Constitution of the League of Nations;
speeches delivered before the Peace Conference by members of the
Commission on the League of Nations; Addresses delivered by Presi-
dent Wilson in Boston, February 26, 1919, and in New York, March 4,
1919. March, 1919.

Criticisms of the Draft Plan for the League of Nations: William Howard
Taft, Charles E. Hughes, Elihu Root. April, 1919.

Up to the limit of the editions printed, any one of the above will be sent postpaid upon receipt of a request addressed to the Secretary of the American Association for International Conciliation, 407 West 117th Street, New York, N. Y.

Copies of the above, so far as they can be spared, will be sent to libraries and educational institutions for permanent preservation postpaid upon receipt of a request addressed to the Secretary of the American Association for International Conciliation.

A charge of five cents will be made for copies sent to individuals. Regular subscription rate twenty-five cents for one year, or one dollar for five years.

« PředchozíPokračovat »