Early Diplomatic Relations 



BETWEEN 



the United States and Mexico 



By WILLIAM R. MANNING, Ph.D. 

 Adjunct Professor of Latin-American History in the University 



of Texas 



418 pages. Cloth, $2.25 



This volume is based on a series of lectures delivered at the 

 Johns Hopkins University in 1913 on the Albert Shaw Founda- 

 tion. It deals with a period in the diplomatic relations between 

 the United States and Mexico, which has hitherto been largely 

 ignored by historians, whose attention has for the most part 

 been centered on the Texas revolution, the admission of Texas 

 into the Union, and the war between the United States and 

 Mexico. 



Early Diplomatic Relations 



BETWEEN 



the United States and Japan 



1853-1865 

 By PAYSON J. TREAT 



Pfofessor of Far Eastern History in Leland Stanford 

 Junior University 



468 pages. 12mo. Cloth, $2.50 



T}uestions of foreign policy are of course beginning to attract 

 much more attention from Americans than they have in the 

 past. The present volume gives the historical foundations of 

 our commercial intercourse and diplomatic relations with Japan. 

 It is based on an exhaustive study of the documentary sources, 

 supplemented by a knowledge of Japanese institutions and the 

 Japanese point of view gained by two visits to that country. 

 Dr. Treat writes sympathetically of Japanese affairs, and his 

 volume is the most thorough and scholarly treatment that we 

 have had of the period covered. Sound historical work of this 

 character will do much to promote a better understanding of the 

 present-day relations between the two countries. 



THE JOHNS HOPKINS PRESS 



BALTIMORE, MARYLAND 



