The Fifth Assembly has undertaken a work of worldwide political importance which, if it succeeds, is destined profoundly to modify present political conditions. This year great progress in this direction has been made in our work. If we succeed, the League of Nations will have rendered an inestimable service to the whole modern world. Such success depends partly upon the Assembly itself and partly upon individual Governments. We submit to the Assembly the fruit of our labours: a work charged with the highest hopes. We beg the Assembly to examine our proposals with care, and to recommend them to the various Governments for acceptance. In this spirit and with such hopes do we request the Assembly to vote the draft resolutions 1 and 2 that are presented with this report. CARNEGIE ENDOWMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE DIVISION OF INTERCOURSE AND EDUCATION Director, NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER Assistant to the Director, HENRY S. HASKELL Division Assistant, AMY HEMINWAY JONES Interamerican Section, Director, PETER H. GOLDSMITH Cable, Interpax, New York Special Correspondents SIR WILLIAM J. COLLINS, M. P., London, England T. MIYAOKA, Tokyo, Japan OTFRIED NIPPOLD, Saarlouis, Territoire de la Sarre. (Switzerland) European Organization Advisory Council President, BARON PAUL D'ESTournelles de CONSTANT, France GUSTAV ADOR, Switzerland MGR. SIMON Deploige, SIR HENRY E. DUKE, England EDOARDO GIRETTI, Italy COUNT ALbert von MINORU OKA, Japan JOSEF REDLICH, Austria HIS HIGHNESS PRINCE SAMAD RT. HON. BARON SHAW OF DUNFERMLINE, England W. F. TREUB, Holland André Weiss, France Executive Committee of the Advisory Council GUSTAV ADOR, Switzerland PAUL APPELL, France JEAN EFREMOFF, Russia BARON PAUL D'Estournelles de CONSTANT, France1 ANDRÉ WEISS, France European Bureau President, BARON PAUL D'ESTOurnelles de Constant1 Vice President, JUSTIN GODART Secretary General, MLLE. M. TH. PEYLADE Auditor, TH. RUYSSEN Office of Secretariat, 173 Boulevard St.-Germain, Paris, France Telephone, Ségur 18.20 Cable, Interpax, Paris Correspondents of the European Bureau JACQUES DUMAS, Paris, France NORMAN ANGELL, London, England CHRISTIAN L. LANGE, Geneva, Switzerland V. A. MAKLAKOFF, Russia HENRI MONNIER, Switzerland THÉODORE RUYSSEN, France 'Died May 15, 1924. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS International Conciliation appeared under the imprint of the American Association for International Conciliation, No. 1, April, 1907 to No. 199, June, 1924. These documents present the views of distinguished leaders of opinion of many countries on vital international problems and reproduce the texts of official treaties, diplomatic correspondence and draft plans for international projects such as the Permanent Court of International Justice. The most recent publications are listed below. A complete list will be sent upon application to International Conciliation, 407 West 117th Street, New York City. 194. The Centenary of the Monroe Doctrine, by Charles Evans Hughes. An address delivered before the American Academy of Political and Social Science at Philadelphia, November 30, 1923; American Cooperation for World Peace, by David Jayne Hill. January, 1924. 195. The Winning Plan selected by the Jury of the American Peace Award. February, 1924. 196. Report upon Health, Sickness and Hunger among German Children, by Haven Emerson, M.D., Professor of Public Health Administration, Columbia University. March, 1924. 197. The Permanent Court of International Justice, by John Bassett Moore. The United States and the Court. Information regarding the Court. April, 1924. 198. Maps showing Territorial Changes since the World War, the Transfer of the German Cables and the League of Nations in 1923, compiled by Lawrence Martin, Washington, D. C. May, 1924. 199. Summary of Part I of the Report of the First (Dawes) Committee of Experts. Questions resulting from the Corfu Incident Submitted September 28, 1923, by the Council of the League of Nations to the Special Commission of Jurists and the Replies of that Commission: Lord Parmoor's Comments. June, 1924. 200. The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace: Organization and Work, compiled by Amy Heminway Jones, Division Assistant. July, 1924. 201. A Practical Plan for Disarmament: Draft Treaty of Disarmament and Security, Submitted to the League of Nations by an American Group; with Introduction and Commentary by James Thomson Shotwell. August, 1924. 202. An Analysis of the American Immigration Act of 1924, by John B. Trevor, M.A., formerly Captain Military Intelligence Division, U.S.A., Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur. September, 1924. 203. America's Part in Advancing the Administration of International Justice, by Edwin B. Parker, Umpire, Mixed Claims Commission, United States and Germany. October, 1924. 204. The Dawes Report on German Reparation Payments, by George A. Finch. The London Conference on the Application of the Dawes Plan, by George A. Finch. November, 1924. 205. Protocol for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes: Text and Analysis; with an Introduction by James Thomson Shotwell. December, 1924. INTERNATIONAL CONCILIATION Published monthly by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Entered as second-class matter September 15, 1924, at the post office at THE JAPANESE LAW OF NATIONALITY AND THE RIGHTS OF FOREIGNERS IN LAND UNDER DIVISION OF INTERCOURSE AND EDUCATION PUBLICATION OFFICE: 44 PORTLAND STREET, WORCESTER, MASS. Subscription prices 25 cents for one year, one dollar for five years Single copies 5 cents STANFORD LAW LIBRARY |