General:
Contents
- Scrapping of ships by the United States, Great Britain, and Japan in
accordance with the treaty for the limitation of naval armament, signed
February 6, 1922 (Documents 1–4)
- Proposals for the calling by the President of the United States of a
disarmament conference (Documents 5–24)
- Disinclination of the United States to be associated in European security
pacts: (1) Geneva protocol; (2) Locarno agreement (Documents 25–29)
- Participation by the United States in the Conference for the Supervision
of the International Traffic in Arms, at Geneva, May 4–June 17, 1925 (Documents 30–49)
- Failure of the United States to secure the adoption of the rules drafted
by the International Commission for the Revision of the Rules of
Warfare (Documents 50–57)
- Negotiations on behalf of the World War Foreign Debt Commission for the
settlement of debts owed the United States by foreign governments (Documents 58–131)
- Belgium (Documents 58–66)
- Czechoslovakia (Documents 67–77)
- France (Documents 78–98)
- Greece (Documents 99–102)
- Italy (Documents 103–105)
- Latvia (Document 106)
- Rumania (Documents 107–121)
- Yugoslavia (Documents 122–131)
- Belgium (Documents 58–66)
- Interest of the United States in the disposition of the proposed
liberation bonds of the Austro-Hungarian succession states (Documents 132–148)
- Refusal by the United States to consent to the adherence of the Soviet
Union to the Spitzbergen treaty of February 9, 1920 (Documents 149–156)
- Assent by President Coolidge to provisions in the Polish-Swiss arbitration
treaty for invoking the assistance of the President of the United States
under certain contingencies (Documents 157–158)
- Unsuccessful efforts to have American customs attachés accorded diplomatic
status (Documents 159–189)
- International convention for the unification of certain rules relating to
bills of lading (Document 190)
- Convention between the United States and other powers for the protection
of industrial property, signed November 6, 1925 (Documents 191–193)
- Acceptance by the United States of invitation to attend the Third
International Telegraph Conference at Paris in 1925 (Documents 194–196)
- Extension of invitations to the Third International Radiotelegraph
conference at Washington in 1927 (Documents 197–201)
- Opposition of the Department of State to participation by the League of
Nations in international conferences of American states (Document 202)
- The Tacna-Arica question: The arbitrator’s award and the establishment of
the Plebiscitary Commission (Documents 203–265)
- Boundary disputes (Documents 266–322)
- Colombia and Nicaragua (Documents 266–269)
- Colombia and Peru (Documents 270–309)
- Costa Rica and Panama (Documents 310–322)
- Colombia and Nicaragua (Documents 266–269)
- Extension of the sovereignty of the United States over Swain’s Island by
joint resolution of Congress, approved March 4, 1925 (Document 323)