Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 63 Part 2.djvu/29

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63 STAT.] CHINA-FRIENDSHIP, COMMERCE, NAVIGATION-NOV. 4 , 1946 ticipation in such corporations and associations. Moreover, each High Contracting Party reserves the right to deny any of the rights and privileges accorded by this Treaty to any corporation or association created or organized under the laws and regulations of the other High Contracting Party which is directly or indirectly owned or controlled, through majority stock ownership or otherwise, by nationals, cor- porations or associations of any third country or countries. ARTICLE XXVII Subject to any limitation or exception provided in this Treaty or hereafter agreed upon between the Governments of the High Con- tracting Parties, the territories of the High Contracting Parties to which the provisions of this Treaty extend shall be understood to comprise all areas of land and water under the sovereignty or au- thority of either High Contracting Party, except the Panama Canal Zone. ATICLE XXVIII Any dispute between the Governments of the two High Contract- ing Parties as to the interpretation or the application of this Treaty, which the High Contracting Parties can not satisfactorily adjust by diplomacy, shall be submitted to the International Court of Justice unless the High Contracting Parties shall agree to settlement by some other pacific means. ARTICLE XXIX 1. This Treaty shall, upon its entry into force, supersede provisions of the following treaties between the United States of America and the Republic of China in so far as such provisions have not previously been terminated: (a) Treaty of Peace, Amity and Commerce, signed at Wang Hea, July 3, 1844; (b) Treaty of Peace, Amity and Commerce, signed at Tientsin, June 18, 1858; (c) Treaty Establishing Trade Regulations and Tariff, signed at Shanghai, November 8, 1858; (d) Treaty of Trade, Consuls and Emigration, signed at Wash- ington, July 28, 1868; (e) Immigration Treaty, signed at Peking, November 17, 1880; (f) Treaty as to Commercial Intercourse and Judicial Procedure, signed at Peking, November 17, 1880; (g) Treaty as to Commercial Relations, signed at Shanghai, Octo- ber 8, 1903; (h) Treaty Establishing Rates of Duty on Imports Into China, signed at Washington, October 20, 1920; (i) Treaty Regulating Tariff Relations, signed at Peiping, July 25, 1928. 1321 Areas affected. Pot, p. 1384 et see. Disputes. Treaties superseded. 8 Stat. 692. 12 Stat. 1023. 12 Stat. 1069. 16 Stat. 739. 22 Stat. 826. 22 Stat. 828 . 33 Stat. 228 . 42 Stat. 1955. 45 Stat. 2742.