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I venture to ask Your Excellency kindly to advise me, after the subject has been studied, of the decision which may be arrived at, so that I may transmit it to my Government.

I avail myself [etc.]

ORESTES FERRARA

811.0141 Sw 2/112

The Secretary of State to the Cuban Chargé (Rodriguez)

WASHINGTON, August 1, 1928.

SIR: Referring to your Embassy's note of June 4, 1928, and to this Department's reply of June 25, 1928,29 with regard to the proposed establishment of a meteorological station at Swan Island, I am pleased to inform you that definite arrangements have now been completed whereby meteorological reports are being received from Swan Island and will continue to be received until October 30, 1928. It is understood that this period includes the principal season of cyclonic disturbances in that region during this year.

The Chief of the Weather Bureau of the United States Government has already advised the director of the meteorological service of Cuba that reports are again being received from Swan Island and that these reports will be made available to his Department.

The possibility of permanently establishing the meteorological station at Swan Island during 1929 is now being taken up with the appropriate Departments of this Government, and I shall be pleased to inform you as soon as there may be further information available in the premises.

Accept [etc.]

Latter not printed.

For the Secretary of State:
W. R. CASTLE, Jr.

CZECHOSLOVAKIA

NATURALIZATION TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND CZECHOSLOVAKIA, SIGNED JULY 16, 1928

711.60 f 4/3

The Minister in Czechoslovakia (Einstein) to the Secretary of State

No. 394

1

PRAGUE, March 14, 1923.
[Received April 6.]

SIR: With reference to the Department's Instruction No. 100 of January 4th ultimo regarding a proposed naturalization treaty with Czechoslovakia 2 I have the honor to enclose the copy of a Note from the Foreign Office stating that the Czecho-Slovak Government is ready to accept the text of such a treaty which had been transmitted in compliance with the Department's Instruction No. 71 of September 5, 1922.1

There appears to be some doubt in the mind of the legal advisors of the Foreign Office with regard to the final meaning of the law of September 22 by which alien women no longer acquire our citizenship on their marriage to Americans. I am therefore writing to enquire if in the Department's opinion any change in the text of the treaty has been made necessary by virtue of this new law.

3

The point raised by the Foreign Office regarding the last paragraph of Article I, seems to be irrelevant and may be due to an incomplete knowledge of a foreign language. Lately in discussing the legal points of the proposed extradition treaty with a high official of the Ministry of Justice I discovered that the insurmountable objection he had raised to our officials assisting the Czechoslovak officers of the law came from his translation of the word "assist" as being present, in the French sense.

A slight clarification of no particular importance is also proposed for Article II.

I shall now await the Department's final instructions with regard to

the Treaty.

I have [etc.]

1 Instructions not printed.

LEWIS EINSTEIN

Draft treaty not printed; it was the same, mutatis mutandis, as the treaty signed by the United States and Bulgaria, Nov. 23, 1923, except that the fifth (and last) paragraph of article I is omitted and article II altered with regard to summonses to military service.

342 Stat. 1021.

[Enclosure-Translation]

The Czechoslovak Minister for Foreign Affairs (Benes) to the American Minister (Einstein)

No. 31.651/III-1 ai 1923

PRAGUE, February 28, 1923. MR. MINISTER: The Ministry for Foreign Affairs has the honor to acknowledge receipt of your Note No. 273 of January 30, 1923.

Having received the opinion of the competent Ministry relative to the Naturalization Treaty, the Ministry for Foreign Affairs has the honor to inform you that the Czechoslovak Government accepts the text proposed by Your Excellency. It would be pleased, however, if the question concerning the citizenship of women married since September 22, 1922-the date when the law relative to the citizenship of women came into effect-with citizens of the United States of America and who do not acquire by this marriage the citizenship of their husbands could be settled at an early date.

As to the details, it is to be noted that the last paragraph of Article I of the draft in question concerns only the United States of America, for there are no subjects in Czechoslovakia who are not at the same time citizens. It would therefore be desirable to modify the said paragraph in this sense, or better still, to defer consideration of this article. until the final draft.

4

The last sentence of Article II might perhaps be more clear if it were drafted according to Article 2 of the Bancroft Treaties about as follows:

"Except in cases when, according to the laws of the country of origin, the penalty might be abolished owing to the statutes of limitation or for any other reason."

The Ministry for Foreign Affairs takes advantage [etc.]

For the Minister:

I. WELLNER

711.60 f 4/3

The Secretary of State to the Minister in Czechoslovakia (Einstein)

No. 130

WASHINGTON, July 26, 1923.

SIR: The Department has received your despatch No. 394 of March 14, 1923, in reply to its instructions Nos. 71 and 100 of September 5, 1922, and January 4, 1923,5 concerning a proposed naturalization treaty between the United States and Czechoslovakia. It appears

Convention signed July 19, 1868, with Baden; Malloy, Treaties, 1776-1909, vol. 1, p. 53. "Neither instruction printed.

that the Czechoslovak Government has expressed a willingness to sign the proposed treaty, with certain modifications. The principal modification suggested relates to the change in the nationality laws of the United States effected by the married women's citizenship act of September 22, 1922, under which alien women no longer acquire American nationality by marriage to American nationals nor by the naturalization of their husbands as American nationals, and American women no longer lose their American nationality by marrying aliens provided the latter are eligible to naturalization in this country. The second change suggested relates to the question of the liability of a naturalized citizen to punishment for an offense committed against his country of origin prior to emigration. In the draft submitted by the Department, Article II read as follows:

"Article II. Nationals of either country, who come within the purview of Article I, may, upon returning to the country of their former nationality, be tried and punished in accordance with the laws thereof for offenses committed before they emigrated, but not for the act of emigration itself; saving always the limitations established by the laws of the original country or any other remission of liability to punishment."

It is proposed by the Czechoslovak Government to amend Article II by the substitution for the last clause of a clause reading as follows:

"Except in cases when, according to the laws of the country of origin, the penalty might be abolished owing to the statutes of limitation or for any other reason."

The Czechoslovak Foreign Minister in his note of February 28, also calls attention to the last paragraph of Article I of the draft treaty in which it is stated that:

"The word 'national', as used in this convention, means a person owing permanent allegiance to, or having the nationality of, the United States or Czechoslovakia, respectively, under the laws thereof."

The Foreign Minister in this relation observes in his note of February 28th, that there are no subjects in Czechoslovakia who are not at the same time citizens, and suggests that it would be desirable to modify this passage or to defer consideration of this Article until the final draft.

In view of the change made by the Act of Congress of September 22, 1922, in the status of alien women who marry American nationals and of American women who marry aliens eligible to naturalization in this country, the Department agrees that it is desirable to make a change in Article I of the proposed treaty by the insertion of a paragraph reading as follows:

"The word, 'naturalized', refers only to the naturalization of persons of full age, upon their own applications, and to the naturaliza

tion of minors through the naturalization of their parents. It does not apply to acquisition of nationality by a woman through marriage.”

As to the definition of the word "national" contained in the fourth paragraph of Article I, I may say that the Department sees no necessity for making a change in it. On the other hand, it seems desirable to have a clear understanding as to the meaning of this word in the treaty. The definition as it now stands by no means involves an admission by the Government of Czechoslovakia that there are nationals of Czechoslovakia who are not citizens thereof.

As it is necessary, in view of the married women's citizenship act, to make a change in Article I of the treaty and as the Czechoslovak Government has suggested other changes, it occurs to the Department that it might be well to submit a new draft of the treaty, and a copy thereof is enclosed herewith. This draft is similar in phraseology to drafts which are being submitted to governments of other countries. It has been drawn with a view to making some of the provisions more definite than those contained in the former draft," particularly in Article II, which relates to the right of either country to punish its former nationals who have obtained naturalization in the other country, for offenses committed against the former prior to the time when they established their residence in the latter. In the new draft treaties submitted to other countries no statement is made in Article II concerning cases in which there may be a remission of liability to punishment under statutes of limitation or any other provisions in the laws of the country of origin. In formulating the new drafts it was assumed that such remission would be granted as a matter of course. For the sake of uniformity this statement has likewise been omitted from the enclosed draft.

You will please bring this draft to the attention of the appropriate authorities, and suggest its substitution for the original draft. However, if, after you have fully explained the matter, the Czechoslovak authorities state that they prefer to continue negotiations upon the basis of the original draft, you will please inform the Department and the matter will be given further consideration.

In presenting this matter again to the Czechoslovak authorities, you will please express the gratification of this Government that the Government of Czechoslovakia sees its way clear to the conclusion of a naturalization treaty between the two countries. The Department is confident that the conclusion of such a treaty will be mutually beneficial, by preventing controversies in individual cases and will greatly serve to promote free and friendly intercourse between the two countries.

I am [etc.]

CHARLES E. HUGHES

'Not printed; it is almost identical with the treaty signed Nov. 23, 1923, with Bulgaria, Foreign Relations, 1923, vol. I, p. 464.

'Not printed.

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