reply to Pope, etc., II 322;
Christmas letter, 1917, depicting a war-weary world, II 328;
on pacifists-from the President down, II 337;
views on Palestine, II 350;
on personal diet, and the benefit of Secretary Baker’s visit, II 369;
on the anti-English feeling at Washington, II 385;
while resting at Sandwich, II 388
Page, Mrs. Catherine, mother and close companion,
I 7;
Christmas letter to, I 8
Page, Frank C. in London, I 134;
with his father in Rowsley when news of
Arabic sinking was
received, II 26;
in service with American troops, II 375;
realizes his father is failing fast and
insists on his returning home,
II 393
Letters to: on building up
the home farm, and the stress of war, I 353;
Christmas letter, 1915, II 121
Page, Henry A., letters to, stating a government might
be neutral, but
no man could be, I 361;
on illusions as to neutrality and the
peace proposals, II 152
Page, Miss Katharine A., arrival in London, I 134;
married in the chapel Royal, II 87;
see also, Loring, Mrs. Charles
G.
Page, Lewis, leaves Virginia to settle in North Carolina, I 3
Page, Logan Waller, has proper perspective of European situation, II 176
Page, Mary E., letter to, II 376
Page, Ralph W., letters to;
impressions of London life, I 161;
on wartime conditions, I 352;
Christmas letter, 1915, II 121;
on longings for fresh Southern vegetables
and fruits and farm life,
II 335;
on style and good writing, II 340;
on the big battle, etc., II 371,
372;
in praise of book on American Diplomacy,
II 381;
on success of our Army and Navy, II 390
Page, Mrs. Ralph W., Christmas letter to, 163
Page, Robert N., letters to, impressions of social London, I 153
Page, Thomas Nelson, Colonel House confers with in
regard to peace
parleys, I 434
Page, Walter Hines, impressions of his early life,
1;
family an old one in Virginia and North
Carolina, 3;
maternal ancestry, 6;
close sympathy between mother and son,
8, 11;
birthplace, and date of birth, 9;
recollections of the Civil War, 10;
finds a market for peaches among Northern
soldiers, 14;
boyhood and early studies, 16;
intense ambition, 20;
Greek Fellowship at Johns Hopkins University,
24;
renewed for the next year, 27;
early prejudices against Yankees, 28;
travels in Germany, 1877, 30;
lectures on Shakespeare, 30;
teacher of English at Louisville, Ky.,
32;
enters journalism, 32;
experience with Louisville Age,
32;
reporter on, then editor of, Gazette,
at St. Joseph, Mo., 33;
a free lance, 34;
correspondent for N.Y. World at