Hall, Admiral William Reginald, brings news of Bernstorff’s
dismissal,
II 215
Hanning, Mrs. Robert, sister of Thomas Carlyle, I 60
Harcourt, Right Honourable Lewis, eulogizes work of
International
Health Board, I 101
Harden, Maximilian, says Germany must get rid of its
predatory
feudalism, II 193
Harper & Brothers, difficulties of, I 64
Harrow, visit to, and talk to schoolboys, I 17
Harvey, George, succeeds Page as editor of Harper’s, I 66
Hay, John, understanding of Hay-Pauncefote Treaty,
I 242;
accused of Anglomania while Ambassador,
I 257
Hays, Sir Bertram, captain of the Olympic,
races ship to hasten
Page’s homecoming, II 404
Hearst, William Randolph, used by Germans in their
peace propaganda,
I 410, 411
Hearst papers, antagonism of, I 149, 256, 264, 286
Hesperian, submarined in violation of Bernstorff’s pledges, II 30
Hewlett, Maurice, his son among the missing, II 115
Home Rule Bill, Carson threatens resistance to, I
137;
“division” in house of Lords,
I 138
Hookworm eradication, efforts in, I 98
Hoover, Charles L., war relief work while American
Consul at Carlsbad,
I 334
Hoover, Herbert C., relief work at beginning of war,
I 333;
selected by Page for Belgian Relief post,
II 310
House, Colonel Edward M., wires Page to come North,
expecting to offer
Secretaryship of Interior,
I 118;
transmits offer of Ambassadorship,
I 130;
on Cowdray and Carden, I 218,
220;
meets Sir Edward Grey to talk
over Panama Tolls question, I 246;
mission to the Kaiser a disappointment,
I 289;
no success in France, I 297;
fancied security in England,
thinks his mission unnecessary, I 298;
telegrams, to and from Wilson
on proffering good offices to avert
war, I 317, 318;
declares bill admitting foreign
ships to American registry “full of
lurking dangers,” I
392;
declares America will declare
war on Germany after Lusitania
sinking, II 2;
sees “too proud to fight”
poster in London, II 6;
recommends Page’s appointment
as Secretary of State, II 11;
fails to alter Wilson’s
opposition to Taft Committee visiting
England, I 348
Letters from: reporting progress
in Panama Tolls matter, I 253;
plans to visit Kaiser and
bring about naval holiday between nations,
I 277;
cites further plans for visiting
Germany, I 281;
respecting proposed trip to
Germany, I 285, 286,
en route, I 288;
note from Berlin, I 296;
from Paris, I 297;
on the outbreak of the war,
I 299;
transmitting Wilson’s
warning to adhere more strictly to neutrality,
I 362;
explains the toning down of
demands that Declaration of London be