Report prepared by a sub-committee on maternal welfare and the hygiene of infants; Minutes of the 18th Session of the Health Committee on collaboration of Liberia, anti-epidemic work in China, biological standardisation, immunisation against scarlet fever and diphteria, dangerous drugs, rural hygiene, maternal welfare, etc.; the Irish Free State was not represented on the Health Committee, composed of men eminent in the medical profession; Irish Catholic position on contraception.
About the Disarmament Conference adjournment; the limited Irish contribution; the principle of equality requested by the German Delegate; the British and French discussion on the principle of equality; Edouard Herriot's speech; Henderson's and S. Lester's views; S. Lester's vote in favour of the resolution but only in the sense of the declaration of President Henderson.
Extract from "Le Démocrate" of 24 July 1932: Irish vote in the Disarmament Conference, and Irish Free State's position to the British Empire further to President Henderson's declaration.
Extract from the "Daily Herald" on J. Simon's defeat in the League of Nations Committee of Nineteen regarding the Sino-Japanese conflict and the question of Japanese evacuation to be completed; S. Lester suggested the League of Nations Assembly had to decide when the moment had come for the Japanese evacuation to be completed.
J. Simon's speech on disarmament; news of the fall of the Von Papen Government.
About an article from William Martin on the Anglo-Irish dispute, W. Martin was one of the best informed journalists in Europe.
Extract from the "Journal de Genève" on the Anglo-Irish economic dispute: tariff walls dispute, and question of the arbitration in the land-annuities dispute to be paid by the Irish Free State: will the arbitration be a British one or an international one since the States in conflict were both members of the League of Nations?
Extract from the "Tribune de Genève" on the economic conflict between Great-Britain and the Irish Free State: tariff walls dispute; land-annuities dispute to be paid by the Irish Free State (decision taken under the Irish government of Cosgrave, but refused by E. de Valera); question of the arbitration in the land-annuities dispute; British arbitration refused by E. de Valera; heavy consequences for the Irish Free State.
About the article from the "Tribune de Genève" entitled "La politique irlandaise et la guerre de tarifs", offending article to the Irish Free State.
Extract from the "Journal des Nations": Anglo-Irish tariff walls dispute; wasn't this economic dispute a pretext for separating the Irish Free State from Great-Britain and creating an independent Irish Republic, what was E. de Valera's wish?