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Telegrams

not received.

Accounts.

Coastal and shipboard charges.

Telegraph transmission.

Messages

from ships.

Messages to ships.

Reimbursements shall be borne by the different managements of the wireless telegraph service or private enterprises which have taken part in the transmission of the wireless telegram, each management or private enterprise relinquishing its share of the rate. Wireless telegrams to which articles 7 and 8 of the Convention of St. Petersburg are applicable shall remain subject, however, to the provisions of the International Telegraph Regulations, except when the acceptance of such telegrams is the result of an error made by the telegraph

service.

2. When the acknowledgment of receipt of a wireless telegram has not reached the station which has transmitted the telegram, the charges shall be refunded only if the fact has been established that the wireless telegram is entitled to reimbursement.

11. ACCOUNTS AND PAYMENT OF CHARGES.

XXXVI.

1. The coastal and shipboard charges shall not enter into the accounts provided for by the International Telegraph Regulations.

The accounts regarding such charges shall be liquidated by the managements of the wireless telegraph service of the countries concerned. They shall be drawn up by the wireless telegraph management to which the coastal stations are subject, and communicated by them to the wireless telegraph managements concerned.

2. For transmission over the lines of the telegraph system wireless telegrams shall be treated, so far as the payment of rates is concerned, in conformity with the International Telegraph Regulations.

3. For wireless telegrams proceeding from ships, the wireless telegraph management to which the shipboard station is subject shall be charged by the wireless telegraph management to which the coastal station is subject with the coastal and ordinary telegraph rates charged on board of vessels.

For wireless telegrams intended for ships, the wireless telegraph management which has collected the fees shall be charged directly by the wireless telegraph management to which the coastal station is subject with the coastal and shipboard rates. The latter shall credit the wireless telegraph management to which the vessel is subject with the shipboard rate.

In case the wireless telegraph management which has collected the charges is the same, however, as the one to which the shipboard station is subject, the shipboard rate shall not be charged by the wireless telegraph management to which the coastal station is subject.

counts.

4. The monthly accounts serving as a basis for the Monthly acspecial accounts of wireless telegrams shall be made out for each telegram separately with all the necessary data within a period of six months from the month to which they refer.

agreements.

5. The Governments reserve the right to enter into Special special agreements among themselves and with private enterprises (parties operating wireless telegraph stations, shipping companies, etc.) with a view of adopting other provisions with regard to accounts.

12. INTERNATIONAL BUREAU.

XXXVII.

The International Bureau of Telegraphs shall be entrusted with the duties specified in Article 13 of the Convention, subject to the consent of the Government of the Swiss Federation and the approval of the Telegraph Union.

The additional expenses resulting from the work of the International Bureau so far as wireless telegraphy is concerned shall not exceed 40,000 francs a year, exclusive of the special expenses arising from the convening of the International Conference.

These expenses shall form the subject of a special account, and the provisions of the International Telegraph Regulations shall be applicable to them. Before the convening of the next Conference, however, each contracting Government shall notify the International Bureau of the class in which it desires to be entered.

XXXVIII.

The management of the wireless telegraph service of the different countries shall forward to the International Bureau a table in conformity with the annexed blank, containing the data enumerated in said table for stations such as referred to in Article IV of the regulations. Changes occurring and additional data shall be forwarded by the wireless telegraph managements to the International Bureau between the 1st and 10th day of each month. With the aid of such data the International Bureau shall draw up a list which it shall keep up to date. The list and the supplements thereto shall be printed and distributed to the wireless telegraph managements of the countries concerned; they may also be sold to the public at the cost price.

International

Bureau.

Functions.

Additional expenses.

Special accounting.

Data ro

quired.

Call letters

The International Bureau shall see to it that the same call letters for several wireless telegraph stations shall notte dunot be adopted.

plicated.

Miscellane

ous.

Marine casualties, etc.

Exchange between ship

13. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS.

XXXIX.

The managements of the wireless telegraph service shall give to agencies of martime information such data regarding losses and casualties at sea or other information of general interest to navigation, as the coastal stations may properly report.

XL.

The exchange of correspondence between shipboard board stations. stations such as referred to in Article 1 of the Convention shall be carried on in such a manner as not to interfere with the service of the coastal stations, the latter, as a general rule, being accorded the right of priority for the public service.

Application to shipboard stations.

Collection of charges.

Order of sending.

Accounting.

Retransmis

sion.

Application

of International Tele

XLI.

1. In the absence of special agreements between the parties concerned, the provisions of the present Regulations shall be applicable analogously to the exchange of wireless telegrams between two vessels at sea, subject to the following exceptions:

(a) To Article XIV. The shipboard rate falling to the transmitting ship shall be collected from the sender, and that falling to the receiving ship shall be collected from the addressee;

(b) To Article XVIII. The order of transmission shall be regulated in each case by mutual agreement between the corresponding stations.

(c) To Article XXXVI. The rates for the wireless telegrams in question shall not enter into the accounts provided for in that article, such charges falling to the wireless telegraph managements which have collected them.

2. Retransmission of wireless telegrams exchanged between vessels at sea shall be subject to special agreements between the parties concerned.

XLII.

The provisions of the International Telegraph Regulations shall be applicable analogously to wireless telegraph Regula graph correspondence in so far as they are not contrary to the provisions of the present regulations.

tions.

Effect.

Signatures.

In conformity with Article 11 of the Convention of Berlin, these Regulations shall go into effect on the first day of July, 1908.

In witness whereof the respective plenipotentiaries have signed one copy of the present Regulations, which

mitted to each of the Parties.

Done at Berlin, November 3, 1906.

ernment of Germany, and a copy of which shall be transshall be deposited in the archives of the Imperial Gov

[Supplement to Article XXXVIII of the Regulations.]

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Countries

of the United States, by and with the advice and con-
the final protocol have been ratified by the Government
tions annexed thereto, the supplementary agreement, and
And whereas, the said convention, with service regula- ratifying.

7345°-S. Doc. 173, 63-1--22

sent of the Senate thereof, and by the Governments of Germany, the Argentine Republic, Austria, Hungary, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Denmark, Spain, France, Great Britain, Japan, Mexico, Monaco, Norway, NetherDeposit of lands, Persia, Portugal, Roumania, Russia, Sweden, and Turkey, and the ratifications of the said Governments were, by the provisions of Article 23 of the said convention, deposited by their respective Plenipotentiaries with the German Government;

ratifications.

Countries adhering.

Proclama

tion.

Interna

tional Tele

graph Convention.

Right of correspond

ence.

And whereas, the said convention has been adhered to by the Governments of Morocco and Zanzibar, by the Government of Austria-Hungary on behalf of Bosnia and Herzegovina, by the Government of Belgium on behalf of the Kongo Colony, by the Government of Great Britain on behalf of the South African Union, by the Government of Japan on behalf of Korea, Formosa, the Japanese part of Saghalin Island and the leased portion of the Kwantung Peninsula, by the Government of the Netherlands on behalf of the Dutch Indies and Curaçao Colony, and by the Government of Portugal on behalf of Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde Islands, Guinea, St. Thomas and Prince's Islands, Goa, Damao, Diu, Macao, and Timor;

Now, therefore, be it known that I, William Howard Taft, President of the United States of America, have caused the said convention and annexes to be made public, to the end the same and every article and clause thereof may be observed and fulfilled with good faith by the United States and the citizens thereof.

In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Done at the City of Washington this twenty-fifth day of May in the year of our Lord one thousand [SEAL.] nine hundred and twelve, and of the Independence of the United States of America the one hundred and thirty-sixth.

By the President:

PC KNOX

Secretary of State

Wм H TAFT

EXTRACT FROM THE INTERNATIONAL TELEGRAPH CONVENTION, SIGNED AT ST. PETERSBURG, JULY 10-22, 1875.

[See Article 17 of the convention.]

ARTICLE 1.

The High Contracting Parties concede to all persons the right to correspond by means of the international telegraphs.

ARTICLE 2.

Secrecy and

safe transmission.

They bind themselves to take all the necessary measures for the purpose of insuring the secrecy of the correspondence and its safe transmission.

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