The Foreign Trade of Latin America: Commercial policies and trade relations of individual Latin American countries. sect. 1. Argentina. sect. 2. Bolivia. sect. 3. Brazil. sect. 4. Chile. sect. 5. Colombia. sect. 6. Ecuador. sect. 7. Paraguay. sect. 8. Peru. sect. 9. Uruguay. sect. 10. Venezuela. sect. 11. Costa Rica. sect. 12. El Salvador. sect. 13. Guatemala. sect. 14. Honduras. sect. 15. Nicaragua. sect. 16. Panama. sect. 17. Mexico. sect. 18. Cuba. sect. 19. Dominican Republic. sect. 20. Haiti. 20 v

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Page 35 - ... stores, for storing goods, and for reshipping them by land and water; an area within which goods may be landed, stored, mixed, blended, repacked, manufactured, and reshipped without payment of duties and without the intervention of customs officials. It is subject equally with adjacent regions to all the laws relating to public health, vessel inspection, postal service, labor conditions, immigration, and indeed everything except the customs.
Page 21 - The nation shall have at all times the right to impose on private property such limitations as the public interest may demand...
Page 82 - Silver Purchase Act of 1934." SEC. 2. It is hereby declared to be the policy of the United States that the proportion of silver to gold in the monetary stocks of the United States should be increased, with the ultimate objective of having and maintaining, one-fourth of the monetary value of such stocks in silver.
Page 17 - States holdings in those foreign corporations or enterprises which are controlled by a person, or closely identified group of persons (corporate or natural), domiciled in the United States, or in the management of which such person or group has an important voice.
Page 21 - The ownership of lands and waters within the limits of the national territory is vested originally in the nation, which has had and has the right to transmit title thereof to private persons, thereby constituting private property.
Page 35 - In general, a free zone (free port or foreign trade zone) is an isolated, enclosed, and policed area, in or adjacent to a port of entry, without resident population, furnished with the necessary facilities for loading and unloading, for supplying fuel and ships' stores, for storing goods, and for reshipping them by land and water.
Page 27 - Commission to organize and administer a national system of electric generation, transmission, and distribution.

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