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Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States, With the Annual Message of the President, Transmitted to Congress December 2, 1895, Part I

Belgium


Contents

    • Prohibition of American cattle (Documents 19–30)
      • Boundary of the independent State of the Congo (Document 31)
        • Dismissal of Belgian minister from Venezuela (Documents 32–34)

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        Contents

        • List of papers, with subjects of correspondence
        • Message of the President
        • Correspondence
          Argentine republic
          • The Missiones award (Document 1)
          • Argentine tariff (Documents 2–3)
          • Duty on wools (Document 4)
        • Austria-Hungary
          • Differential duty on sugar imported from bounty-paying countries (Documents 5–7)
          • Acceptance of passports as prima facie evidence of citizenship (Documents 8–12)
          • Right of judicial officers to disregard passports as prima facie evidence of citizenship (Documents 13–14)
          • Citizenship, case of Edward Kovacsy (Documents 15–16)
          • Citizenship, case of Salomon Faden (Documents 17–18)
        • Belgium
          • Prohibition of American cattle (Documents 19–30)
          • Boundary of the independent State of the Congo (Document 31)
          • Dismissal of Belgian minister from Venezuela (Documents 32–34)
        • Brazil
          • Decision of the President in the disputed boundary question between Argentine Republic and Brazil.
          • Refund of expediente charges (Documents 35–38)
          • Reestablishment of diplomatic relations between Brazil and Portugal (Documents 39–40)
          • Monument to Monroe (Documents 41–42)
          • Assault on American seamen at Santa Catharina (Documents 43–50)
          • Law regulating foreign life insurance companies (Documents 51–52)
          • British occupancy of the Island of Trinidad (Documents 53–58)
          • Conflict with a French force in Amapa (Document 59)
          • Passports (Documents 60–62)
          • Anniversary of the proclamation of the Republic (Document 63)
          • President’s message relative to Venezuelan boundary dispute (Document 64)
        • Chile
          • United States and Chilean claims (Documents 65–68)
          • Settlement of the claim of the North and South American Construction Company (Document 69)
          • Resumption of specie payment (Document 70)
        • China
          • Antiforeign riots (Documents 71–197)
          • Asylum for missionaries on Russian territory (Documents 198–200)
          • Missionary work in China (Document 201)
          • Protection of legation by United States troops (Document 202)
          • Treaty of peace between China and Japan (Documents 203–204)
        • Colombia
          • Arbitration of the Cerutti claim.
        • Costa Rica
          • President’s message relative to Venezuelan boundary dispute (Document 205)
        • Denmark
          • Discriminating duty on sugar imported from bounty-paying countries (Documents 206–208)
          • Peary relief expedition (Documents 209–213)
          • Prohibition of American cattle (Documents 214–215)
          • Cattlemen left destitute in foreign countries (Documents 216–217)
        • Dominican Republic
          • Firing upon the schooner Henry Crosby (Documents 218–229)
          • Rescission of commercial arrangement (Documents 230–231)
          • Franco-Dominican difficulty (Documents 232–241)
        • Ecuador
          • Shelter as distinguished from asylum (Documents 242–243)
          • Recognition of de facto government (Documents 244–247)
          • Arbitration of territorial claims (Document 248)
        • France
          • Case of John L. Waller (Documents 249–381)
            • I.—Correspondence with the embassy of the United States at Paris. (Documents 251–354)
            • II.—Dispatches from the consul of the United States at Tamatave. (Documents 355–359)
            • III.—Correspondence with the consul of the United States at Port Louis, Mauritius. (Documents 360–368)
            • IV.—Interviews. (Document 369)
            • V.—Papers left at the Department of State by Crammond Kennedy, Esq. (Documents 370–375)
            • VI.—Dispatches from the consul of the United States at Tamatave relating to Mr. Waller’s administration of the estate of W.F. Crockett. (Documents 376–381)
          • French claims against the Dominican Republic (Documents 382–391)
          • Prohibition of the importation of American cattle (Documents 392–406)
          • Withdrawal of consular privileges from unsalaried officers in Tunis (Documents 407–412)
          • Rupture of relations between France and Venezuela (Documents 413–415)
          • Protection of Venezuelan citizens in France (Documents 416–417)
          • Citizenship of Caspar S. Crowninshield (Document 418)
          • Arbitration (Document 419)
        • Germany
          • Exclusion of American life insurance companies (Documents 420–440)
          • Arrest of Louis Stern at Kissingen (Documents 441–474)
          • Trial for an offense other than that for which extradition is granted (Documents 475–478)
          • Prohibition of the importation of American cattle (Documents 479–482)
          • Transit of American beef through Germany prohibited (Document 483)
          • Exportation of American pork (Documents 484–488)
          • Currency question (Documents 489–494)
          • Differential duty on sugar imported from bounty-paying countries (Documents 495–496)
          • Protest against immigration and quarantine laws (Documents 497–498)
          • Claim by Wurtemberg authorities of right to require other evidence of citizenship than passports (Documents 499–503)
          • Opening of the Northern Baltic Canal (Documents 504–507)
          • Military service cases (Documents 508–509)
          • Military service case of Frederick Sauer (Document 510)
          • Indemnity claim of F. W. Benque, on account of his expulsion from Hamburg (Documents 511–512)
          • Patents for inventions (Document 513)
          • Statute of limitation in desertion cases (Documents 514–516)
          • Citizenship of Dora Schultz (Documents 517–518)
          • Citizenship of Charlie Ehrlich (Documents 519–520)
          • Consular certificates as to validity of marriages (Documents 521–522)
          • Relations between Prussia and Waldeck (Document 523)
          • Indorsements on United States passports by German officers (Documents 524–525)
          • Affairs in Samoa.
        • Great Britain
          • Venezuelan boundary controversy (Documents 526–532)
          • Post routes in Alaska (Documents 533–538)
          • Speeches made by Thomas F. Bayard (Documents 539–545)
          • Protection of fur seals in Bering Sea (Documents 546–621)
          • Regulations for preventing collisions at sea (Documents 622–624)
          • Shooting of James Bain at New Orleans (Documents 625–635)
          • British demands on Nicaragua (Documents 636–639)
          • Reciprocal free entry of boom logs (Documents 640–644)
          • Jurisdiction over certain islands in Lac La Croix (Documents 645–646)
          • Transit of cattle across Canadian territory for export (Documents 647–648)
          • Deep-water canals between the Great Lakes and the Atlantic Ocean (Documents 649–650)
          • Reciprocity in maritime charges (Documents 651–659)
          • Navigation on the Great Lakes (Documents 660–663)
          • Riots in China (Documents 664–665)
          • British protectorate over Amatongaland (Documents 666–667)
          • Political trials at Honolulu (Documents 668–669)
          • The boundary line between Alaska and Canada (Documents 670–671)
          • Boundary—Lake of the Woods (Documents 672–673)
          • Release of John Curtin Kent (Documents 674–675)
          • Affairs in Samoa.
          • Cattlemen left destitute in foreign countries (Documents 676–679)
          • Fires on board of cotton ships (Documents 680–683)
          • Claims for land in the Fiji Islands (Documents 684–686)

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