Introduction, by G.H. Blakeslee.--Contrasts in the development of nationality in the Anglo- and Latin-American by F.A. Pezet.--Pan-American possibilities, by J. Barrett.--A glance at Latin-American civilization, by F.J. Yanes.--The Mexican situation from a Mexican point of view, by L. Cabrera.--The fundamental causes of the present situation in Mexico, by N.O. Winter.--The Mexican situation, by S.W. Reynolds.--Democracy on trial, by J. Howland.--The present situation in Mexico as shaped by past events, by L.C. Wells.--The present day phase of the Monroe doctrine, by F.E. Chadwick.--The Monroe doctrine from a South American viewpoint, by C.H. Sherrill.--Should we abandon the Monroe doctrine? by H. Bingham The Monroe doctrine, by G.F. Tucker.--The modern meaning of the Monroe doctrine, by J.M. Callahan.--The Monroe doctrine, by A.B. Hart.--The development of our Latin-American trade, by J.H. Hammond.--Advantages of making the Canal Zone a free city and free port, by W.D. Boyce.--Some economic facts and conclusions about South America, by S.O. Martin.--The probable effect of the opening of the Panama Canal on our economic relations with the people of the west coast of South America, by H. Bingham.--Some of the obstacles to North American trade in Brazil, by J.C. Branner.--American intervention in Central America, by P.M. Brown.--The Dominican convention and its lessons, by J.H. Hollander In justice to the United States: a settlement with Colombia, by E. Harding.--The relations of the United States with the Latin-American republics, by L. Grahame.--The mind of the Latin-American nations, by D. Monti.--Higher education in Latin America, by E.E. Brandon.--The universities and American international relations, by G.W. Nasmyth.--Patagonia and tierra del Fuego, by J. Moneta.--The physical basis of the Argentine nation, by B. Willis.--The adaptability of the white man to tropical America, by E. Huntington