460. Commissions in the interest of Sanitation. 461. Commissions in the interest of Foreign Creditors. 462. Permanent Commission concerning Sugar • 494 . 495 . 495 496 • 496 497 . 497 . 497 . 497 • 497 • 498 466. International Office of Weights and Measures 467. International Office for the Protection of Works of Literature and Art and of Industrial Property. 468. International Maritime Office at Zanzibar 469. International Office of Customs Tariffs. 470. Central Office of International Transports 471. Permanent Office of the Sugar Convention III. Transactions besides Negotiation 486. Different kinds of Transaction 494. The Treaty-making Power 495. Treaty-making Power exercised by Heads of States 496. Minor Functionaries exercising Treaty-making Power 497. Constitutional Restrictions 498. Mutual Consent of the Contracting Parties 499. Freedom of Action of consenting Representatives . 500. Delusion and Error in Contracting Parties VOL. I. SECT. III. Objects of Treaties 501. Objects in general of Treaties 502. Obligations of Contracting Parties only can be Object 503. An Obligation inconsistent with other Obligations cannot be an Object.. 504. Object must be physically possible 505. Immoral Obligations PAGE 526 - 527 - 527 . 527 · 527 512. Ratification regularly, but not absolutely, necessary. 513. Space of Time for Ratification . 533 • 534 519. Effect of Treaties upon Contracting Parties . VII. Means of Securing Performance of Treaties Parties 541. Extinction of one of the two Contracting Parties 542. Impossibility of Execution 543. Realisation of Purpose of Treaty other than by Fulfilment 544. Extinction of such Object as was concerned in a Treaty. XI. Cancellation of Treaties 545. Grounds of Cancellation 546. Inconsistency with subsequent International Law 547. Violation by one of the Contracting Parties. • 553 548. Subsequent Change of Status of one of the Contracting 549. War Parties 555 · 556 · 557 XII. Renewal, Reconfirmation, and Redintegration of Treaties XIII. Interpretation of Treaties 553. Authentic Interpretation, and the Compromise Clause. 554. Rules of Interpretation which recommend themselves CHAPTER III IMPORTANT GROUPS OF TREATIES I. Important Law-making Treaties 555. Important Law-making Treaties a product of the Nineteenth 562. Declaration of St. Petersburg 564. General Act of the Congo Conference 565. Treaty of Constantinople of 1888 . 566. General Act of the Brussels Anti-Slavery Conference 567. Final Act of the Hague Peace Conference 568. Treaty of Washington of 1901 584. Union for Protection of Works of Literature and Art 585. Union for the Publication of Customs Tariffs |