Navy Department, ignores urgent recommendations of Admiral Sims that destroyers be sent, II 276, 284
Negro, the, the invisible “freedom”, I
12;
wrong leadership after the Civil War,
I 14;
fails to take advantage of university
education during
Reconstruction, I 18
Negro education, and industrial training advocated, I 43
Neutrality, strictly observed, I 358, 360;
the mask of, II 230
New York Evening Post, connection with, I 48
New York World, correspondent for, at Atlanta
Exposition, I 34;
on editorial staff, I 35
Northcliffe, Lord, illness from worry, II 66;
“saving the nation from its government”,
II 116;
attitude on Wilson’s peace note,
II 207
Norway, shipping destroyed by submarines, II 281
Nicolson, Harold, the silent toast with, II 301
Ogden, Robert C., organizes Southern Educational Conference, I 83; after twenty years of zealous service, I 126
O’Gorman, Senator, active in Panama Tolls controversy, I 243, 283
“O. Henry,” on Page’s “complimentary” rejection of manuscripts, II 303
Osler, Sir William, Page’s physician, insists on the return home, II 393
Pacifism, work of the “peace spies,” II 210
Pact of London, binding the Allies not to make a separate peace, I 409 note
Page, Allison Francis, a builder of the commonwealth,
I 4;
attitude toward slavery and the Civil
War, I 5;
ruined by the war, I 13
Page, Allison M., falls at Belleau Wood, II 392, 406
Page, Anderson, settles in Wake County, N.C., I 4
Page, Arthur W., Delcasse in conversation with tells
of Kaiser’s
proposal to join in producing “complete
isolation” of the United
States, II 192;
called to London in hopes of influencing
his father to resign and
return home before too late, II 393
Letters to;
on the motor trip to Scotland, I 142;
on conditions in second month of the war,
I 335;
a national depression and the horrors
of war, I 344;
emotions after Lusitania sinking,
II 5;
on the tendency toward fads and coddling,
II 10;
on the future relations of the United
States and Great Britain, II 84;
on the vicissitudes of the “German
Ambassador to Great Britain,” 1190;
Christmas letter, 1915, II 121;
on the attitude in the United States toward
Germany, II 129;
on the effect of the war on future of
America, and the world, II 217;
never lost faith in American people, II
223;
on America’s entrance into the war,
II 238;
on grave conditions, submarine and financial,
II 287;
on the occasion of the Plymouth speech,
and the receptions, II 317;
on the Administration’s lack of