The Contracting Powers agree to prohibit, for a period extending to the close of the Third Peace Conference, the discharge of projectiles and explosives from balloons or by other new methods of a similar nature. International Law - Page 401by George Grafton Wilson, George Fox Tucker - 1901 - 459 pagesFull view - About this book
| Thomas Baty, John Hartman Morgan - International law - 1915 - 618 pages
...fourth— "To prohibit, for a period extending to the close of the Third Peace Conference, the discharge of projectiles and explosives from balloons or by other new methods of a similar nature," 8 was less fortunate. The only great Powers who signed it were the United States and Great Britain.... | |
| Law - 1915 - 614 pages
...agreed "to prohibit for a period extending to the close of the Third Peace Conference the discharge of projectiles and explosives from balloons or by other new methods of a similar nature." The Convention, however, adds that "the present declaration is only binding on the Contracting Powers... | |
| Arbitration (International law) - 1915 - 278 pages
...agree to prohibit, for a period extending to the close of the Third Peace Conference, the discharge of projectiles and explosives from balloons or by other new methods of a similar nature. The present Declaration is only binding on the Contracting Powers in case of war between two or more... | |
| George Breckenridge Davis, Gordon Edward Sherman - International law - 1915 - 712 pages
...BALLOONS DECLARATION. — The contracting powers agree, for a period of five years, to forbid the throwing of projectiles and explosives from balloons or by other new methods of a similar nature.1 II — PROJECTILES WHICH DIFFUSE ASPHYXIATING GASES DECLARATION. — The contracting powers... | |
| Thomas Baty, John Hartman Morgan - International law - 1915 - 632 pages
...— " To prohibit, for a period extending to the close of the Third Peace Conference, the discharge of projectiles and explosives from balloons or by other new methods of a similar nature,"3 was less fortunate. The only great Powers who signed it were the United States and Great... | |
| Henry Wheaton, Coleman Phillipson - International law - 1916 - 1030 pages
...Declaration was signed: " The contracting Powers agree to prohibit for a term of five years the discharge of projectiles and explosives from balloons or by other new methods of a similar nature." It has already been pointed out (d) that at the second Hague Conference, 1907, many States agreed to... | |
| United States. Department of State - International Peace Conference - 1916 - 166 pages
...agree to prohibit, for a period extending to the close of the Third Peace Conference, the discharge of projectiles and explosives from balloons or by other new methods of a similar nature. The declaration was a reenactment of the analogous provision of the First Conference, which, however,... | |
| Arbitration (International law) - 1900 - 536 pages
...Siam, Sweden and Norway and Bulgaria ; and a copy of a declaration to prohibit for a term of five years the launching of projectiles and explosives from balloons or by other new methods of a similar nature, signed at The Hague on July 19, 1899, by the plenipotentiaries of the United States and the THE ADVOCATE... | |
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