Mexico:
Contents
- Messages of the de facto Provisional President, Victoriano Huerta, to
Congress, April 1 and September 16, 1913 (Documents 774–775)
- Political affairs: assassination of President Madero and Vice President
Pino Suárez; seizure of the executive power by General Huerta, cooperating
with General Felix Díaz; dictatorship of Huerta; imprisonment of opposition
deputies and nullification of presidential elections; suppression of Díaz;
uprising of Constitutionalists under Venustiano Carranza; measures taken by
the United States on the border and in Mexican waters; measures taken by the
Diplomatic Corps to protect the lives of foreigners
(Documents 776–1115)
- Violations of neutrality: prohibition of shipment of arms and munitions of
war into Mexico from the United States, and exceptions thereto (Documents 1116–1131)
- Protection of American life and property in Mexico
(Documents 1132–1143)
- Protection by the United States of Spanish, French, German, Chinese, and
Japanese subjects in Mexico (Documents 1144–1153)
- General Policy (Documents 1144–1153)
- General Policy (Documents 1144–1153)
- Protection of Spanish Subjects (Documents 1154–1179)
- Protection of French Citizens (Documents 1180–1181)
- Protection of German Subjects
- Protection of Japanese Subjects (Documents 1182–1185)
- Protection of Chinese Subjects (Documents 1186–1203)
- Claims of American citizens against Mexico for damages arising from
revolutionary disturbances
(Documents 1204–1237)
- Chamizal controversy
(Documents 1238–1273)
- Construction and maintenance of protective works on the Colorado River and
negotiations with the Government of Mexico concerning the equitable
distribution of the waters of that river
(Documents 1274–1294)
- Settlement of the controversy of the Tlahualilo Company with the
Government of Mexico (Documents 1295–1299)